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198 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
immoderately she weeps for tybalt's death and therefore have i little talked of love
WT WS |
paris and dramatic irony
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for venus smiles not in a house of tears
WT WS |
paris and mythical allusion
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and in his wisdom hastes our marriage to stop the inundation of her tears which, to much minded by herself alone may be put form her by society
WS |
paris
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that may be sir when i may be a wife
WT WS |
juliet and verbal irony
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to answer that i should confess to you
WT WS |
juliet and verbal irony
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do not deny to him that you love me
WT WS |
paris and verbal irony
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i will confess to you that i love him
WT WS |
juliet and verbal irony
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thy face is mine and thou hast slandered it
WS |
paris
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it may be so for it is not mine own
WS |
juliet
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o shut the door and when thou hast done so come weep with me past hope past care past help
WS |
juliet
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tell me not friar that thou hearest of this unless thou tell me how i may prevent it 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
WS WT |
juliet and death imagery and foreshadowing
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this shall slay them both
WT WS |
foreshadowing and juliet
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twixt my extremes and me this bloody knife shall play the umpire arbitrating that which the commission of thy years and art could to no issue of true honor bring
WT WS |
metaphor and juliet
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be not so long to speak i long to die if what thou speakst speak not of remedy
WT WS |
juliet and approx. rhye
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hold daughter i do spy a kind of hope which craves as desperate an execution as that is desperate which we would prevent
WS |
friar
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if rather than to marry county paris thou hast the strength of will to slay thyself then is it likely thou wilt undertake a thing like death to chide away this shame
WS |
friar
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o bid me leap rather than marry paris from off the battlements of any tower or walk in thievish ways or bid me lurk
WT WS |
juliet and hyberbole
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where serpents are; chain me with roaring bears or hide me nightly n a charnel house
WT WS |
juliet and hyperbole
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oercovered quite with dead men's rattling bones with reeky shanks and yellow chapless skulls or bid me go into a new made grave and hide me with a dead man in his shroud
WT WS |
juliet and hyperbole
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things that to hear them told have made me tremble and i will do it without fear or doubt to live an unstained wife to my sweet love
WT WS |
juliet and hyberbole
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go home be merry give consent to marry paris
WS |
friar
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take thou this vial being then in bed and this distilling liquor drink thou off; when presently through all thy veins shall run a cold and drowsy humor
WS |
friar
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i'll send a friar with speed to mantua with letters to thy lord
WS |
friar
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how now my headstrong where have you been gadding?
WT WS |
capulet and epithet
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pardon i beseech you hence forward i am ever ruled by you
WS |
juliet
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go tell him of this i'll have this knot knit up tomorrow morning
WS |
capulet
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now afore god this reverend holy friar all our whole city is much bound to him
WT WS |
capulet and dramatic irony
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i'll play the housewife for once
WS |
capulet
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my heart is wondrous light since this same wayward girl is so reclaimed
WT WS |
capulet and irony
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i pray thee leave me to myself tonight for i have need of many orisons to move the heavens to mile upon my state
WS |
juliet
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so please you let me now be left alone and let the nurse this night sit up with you for i am sure you have your hands full all in this so sudden business
WT WS |
excuse and juliet
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i have faint cold fear thrills through my veins that almost freezes up the heat of life
WT WS |
juliet and foreshadowing
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what if this mixture do not work at all shall i be married then tomorrow morning no no this shall forbid it lie thou here
WS WT |
juliet and soliloquy
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what if it be a poison which the friar subtly hath ministered to hav eme dead
WS WT |
juliet soliloquy
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how if when i am laid into the tomb i wake before the time that romeo come to redeem me there's a fearful point shall i not then be stifled in the vault to whose foul mouth no healthsome air breathes in
WS WT |
juliet and soliloquy
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the horrible conceit of death and night together with the terror of the place as in a vault an ancient receptacle where this many hundred years the bones of all my buried ancestors are packed; where bloody tybalt yet but green in earth
WS WT |
juliet and soliloquy
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so earlywaking what with loathsome smells and shrieks like mandrakes torn out of the earth
WS WT |
juliet and soliloquy
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methinks i see my cousins ghost seeking out romeo that did spit his body upon a rapiers point
WT WS |
juliet and foreshadowing
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ay you have been a mouse hunt in your time but i will watch you from such watching now
WS |
lady capulet
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drier logs call peter he will show thee where they are
NEW LINE: logs loggerhead WT WS |
capulet and pun
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sleep for a week for the next night i warrant the county paris hath set up his rest that you shall rest but little
WS |
nurse
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ay let the county take you in your bed he'll fright you up in faith will it not be
WS |
nurse
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lady lady lady alas alas help help my lady's dead o weraday that ever i was born some agua vitae ho my lord my lady
WS |
nurse; finds juliet dead
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o me o me my child my only life revive, look up or i will die with thee
WT WS |
lady capulet and dramatic irony
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death lies on her like an untimely frost upon the sweetest flower of all the field
WT WS |
capulet and simile
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death that hath ta'en her hence to make me wail ties up my tongue and will not let me speak
WT WS |
capulet and peresonification
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O son, the night before thy wedding day Hath Death lain with thy wife. There she lies, Flower as she was, deflowered by him. Death is my son in law, Death is my heir; my daughter he hath weedded. I ill die and leave him all. Life, living, all is Death's
WT WS |
capulet and personification, metaphor and death imagery
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but one poor one one poor and loving child but one thing to rejoice and solace in and cruel deat ath catched it form my sight
WS |
lady cpulet
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most detestable death, by thee beguiled by cruel cruel thee quite overthrown
WT WS |
paris and personification
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dead art thou alack my child is dead and with my child my joys are buried
WT WS |
irony and capulet
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heaven and yourself had part in this fair maid now heaven hath all and all the better is it for the maid our part in her you could not keep from death but heaven keeps his part in eternal life
WS |
paris
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our instruments to melancholy bells
our wedding cheer to a sad burial feast our solemn hymns to sullen dirges change; our bridal flower serve for a buried corse; and all things change the to the contrary WT WS |
capulet and situational irony
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o play me some merry dump to comfort me
WT WS |
peter and oxymoron
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i'll re you i'll fa you do you note me
WT WS |
peter and pun
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and you re us and fa us, you note us
WT WS |
first musician and pun
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silver sound
why silver sound why music with her silver sound marry sir because silver hath a sweet sound i say silver sound because musicians sound for silver WT WS |
peter and musicians and pun(s)
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it i may trust the flattering truth of sleep my dreams presage some oyful news at hand
WS WT |
romeo and ironic
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i dreamt my lady came and found me dead strange dream that give a dead man leave to think and breathed such life with kisses in my lips that i revived and was an emperor
WT WS |
romeo and inverted ending
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then she is well and nothing can be ill her body sleeps in capels monument and her immortal part with angels lives
WS WT |
man and irony of the situation
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is it even so then i defy you stars
WS |
romeo and is blaming fate
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hast thou no letters to me from the friar
WS |
romeo
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no matter get thee gone
WS WT |
romeo and verbal irony
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well juliet i will lie with thee tonight
WT WS |
romeo and foreshadowing
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apothecary
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pharmacist
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and if a man did need a poison now whose sale is present death in mantua here lives a caitiff wretch would sell it him
WT WS |
romeo and soliloquy
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a dram of poison such soon speeding gear as will disperse itself through all the veins that the life weary taker may fall dead
WS |
romeo and he asked for drugs
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such mortal drugs i have; but mantuas law is death to any he that utters them
WS |
apothecary
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famine is in thy cheeks need and oppression starveth in thy eyes contempt and beggary hangs upon thy back; the world is not thy friend, nor the world's law the world affords no law to make thee rich; then be not poor but break it and take this
WS |
romeo
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my poverty but not my will consents
WS |
apothecary
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i pay thy poverty and not thy will
WS |
romeo
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there is thy gold worse poison to mens' souls, doing more murder in this loathsome world than these poor compounds that thou mayst not sell i sell thee poison; thou hast sold me none
WS |
romeo
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come cordial and not poison go with me to juliet's grave; for there must i use thee
WT WS |
romeo and metaphor
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going to find a barefoot brother out one of our order to associate me here in this city visiting the sick and finding him the searchers of the town
WS |
john
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i could not send it here it is again nor get a messenger to bring it thee so fearful were they of infection
WS |
john
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unhappy fortune by my brother hood
WT WS |
friar and oxymoron
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get me an iron crow an bring it straight unto my cell
WS |
friar
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poor living corse, closed in a dead mans tomb
WT WS |
friar and oxymoron
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whistle then to me as signal that thou hearest something approach
WS |
paris
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sweet flower with flowers thy bridal bed i strew o woe thy canopy is dust and stones which with sweet water nightly i will dew or wanting that with tears distilled by moans the obsequies that i for thee will keep nightly shall be to strew thy grave and weep
WT WS |
paris and emtaphor
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hold take this letter early in the morning see thou deliver it to my lord and father
WS |
romeo
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is partly to behold my lady's face but chiefly to take thence from her dead finger a precious ring a ring that i must use in dear employment
WS |
romeo
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by heaven i will tear thee joint by joint and strew this hungry churchyard with thy limbs
WT WS |
romeo and personficiation
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the time and my intents are savage wild more fierce and more inexorable far than empty tiers or the roaring sea
WT WS |
romeo and nautical imagery
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thou detestable maw thou womb of death gorged with the dearest morsel of the earth thus i enforce thy rotten jaws to open and in despite i'll cram thee with more food
WT WS |
romeo and metaphor
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and here is come to do some villainous shame to the dead bodies i will apprehend him stop thy unhallowed toil vile montague can vengeance be pursued further than death condemned villain i do apprehend thee obey and go with me for thou must die
WS |
paris
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good gentle youth tempt not a desperate man
WS |
romeo and is warning paris
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by heaven i love thee better than myself for i come hither armed against myself
WS |
romeo
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a madman's mercy bid thee run away
WS |
romeo
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o i am slain if thou be merciful open the tomb lay me with juliet
WS |
paris
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in faith i will let me peruse this face mercutio's kinsman noble county paris
WS |
romeo
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pensive
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thoughtful; think deeply
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enjoined
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to order
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beuile
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tricked
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distraught
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upset
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prostrate
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lay down face down on the ground
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vial
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little botle or container
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abate
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slows down; lessens
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dirge
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sad funeral song
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fester
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become infected and ooze puss
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shroud
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burial wrapping
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why is paris visiting the friar
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to arrange the wedding
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how does paris explain the sudden haste of the marriage plans
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they want to make juliet happy and stop her tears
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what is ironic about the conversation between juliet and paris
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she is talking about romeo and paris thinks its him
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explain what juliet tells friar lawrence she will do if the wedding to paris cannot be avoided
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she will kill herself
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the friar says he has thought of a way out but what would it require
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putting hersel finto danger and needs courage
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what is juliets answer to the friar in her effort to convince him that she will do anything to avoid the marriage with paris
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1. jump off a tower
2. be surrounded by thieves 3. be in a room of snakes 4. be chained to a bear 5. be locked in a charnal house (where the bones are at) 6. be buried alive and wrapped in a dead man's shroud |
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summarize friar's plan and how long will the effects of the potion last
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the potion will last 42 hours and she will drink it, appear to be dead; the friar will write a letter for romeo and will find someone to deliver it to him
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what does juliet says that makes her father happy
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she's going to marry paris
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capulet says "ill have this knot knit up tomorrow morning" what day is juliet to get married? what day had originally been chose? what implication does this have
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juliet will be married on wednesday but the original day was thursday; there is not enough time to get the memssage to romeo; lack of time
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what is ironic bout capulets relief and joy? what type of irony is this
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juliet isn't really going to marry paris; dramatic irony
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why does juliet tell the nurse to leave her to herselg
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she needs to pray and her mother needs help
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if the potion does not work what will juliet do
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she will kill herself with a dagger
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how does juliet show her maturity and independence in this scene
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she is actually thinking thigns through
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which lines who juliets apprehension before carrying out the friars plan
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if the mixture doesn't work? what if it's poison? wakes up before romeo comes? wake up and suffocate? wake up early and go crazy? wake up and kill herself?
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t/f capulet and his servants have been cooking all night long
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true
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explain the term cotquean. who is called this and by whom
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cotquean - husband controlled by a wife; nurse makes fun of capulet
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what is revealed about capulets younger years
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he chased young ladies; was a player
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t/f capulet sent paris in to awaken juliet and giver her a good morning kiss
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false the nurse goes in
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in one sentence sum up this scene
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getting ready for the wedding
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who first finds juliet? describe juliet's condition
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nurse; she appears to be dead
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"flower with frost"
what literary term is this an example of |
simile
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what does capulet mean in lines 35-41
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personifies death
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how does the friar try to comfort juliets parents
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says she's in a better place
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lord capulet laments that wedding preparation will now become part of a funeral. list 4 specific elements of a wedding that will now be used in the funeral.
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music - bells
feast - funeral feast happy song - sad song wedding flower - for corpse |
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how are the musicians affected by the death of juliet? what point might shakespeare be making
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they won't get paid because there is no funeral to play at; life goes on
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apothecary
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pharmacist
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haughty
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arrogant; proud
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conspire
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to plan; plan against someone or something
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paramour
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your lover
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remnants
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leftovers; remains
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amorous
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frisky in sexual way
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inter
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bury
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sepulcher
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a grave
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penury
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poverty
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scourge
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to punish
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summarize romeos dream. considering the friars plan, why is romeos dream ironic?
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juliet found him dead - kissed him and revived him as an emperor; the opposite will happen
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who is balthasar? what news does romeo expect from him? what news does he bring? how does this disrupt the friar's plan
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romeo's servant and something from the friar; he says juliet is dead and romeo knows nothing about the plan
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how does romeo respond when balthasar says there is no news form the friar? why is romeos response ironic
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said it's ok; doesnt care- it's a big deal and will lead to his death
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what does romeo mean when he says then i defy you stars
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blames fate and is goign to defy fate
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what does romeo decide to do after he hears balthasar's story
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buy poison and kill himself in verona
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why was the apothecary reluctant to give romeo poison
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it's againt the law
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what does romeo mean in lines 80-81
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worst poison is gold because it can buy many deaths
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what story does friar john tell friar as explanation as to why he could not deliver the letter to romeo
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he was stuck in a sick house; no one could get in or out
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after hearing the news from friar john what does friar intend to do
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be with juliet when she wakes and explain and send a letter to romeo
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find and copy an example of an oxymoron from the end of the scene
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living corpse & unhappy fortune; both said by friar
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why is paris at juliets tomb and who interrupted paris's ritual for his true love
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he is there to lay flowers and romeo interrupts it
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romeo gives balthasar 2 reasons for entering the tomb. what are they
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to get the ring from juliet and to look at her
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what does romeo give balthasar to give to his father? how might this become important at the end of the play
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a letter and it could be evidence to prove what went on
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what did romeo say he would do to balthasar if he tried to enter the tomb
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he would tear him apart and feed him tot eh churchyard
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why does paris think romeo has come to the tomb
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to do something to the bodies since they were thought to be enemies
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what is it about juliet that should have told romeo that she was not dead; what is the dramatic irony?
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she was warm and had color - we know she's not dead
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where did friar want to hide juliet? why doesn't friar stay in the tomb with juliet after she awakens
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he wants to put her in a house of nuns and he leaves because he hears people coming
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why did juliet kiss romeo after he is dead
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she tries to get poison off his lips
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how did juliet die
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she stabbed herself with romeo's dagger
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who are some of the suspects brought to the prince
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friar and balthasar
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when montague first arrives on the scene what does he tell those gathered
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his wife died form a broken heart because of the exile
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relate the events that lead to romeo and juliet's death as they are told by friar near the plays end
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the friar is very honest about the story and tells them the truth about everything
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what information does romeo's letter give
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why he did what he did
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how do montague and capulet plan to honor the memories of their children
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golden statues and the feud to be over
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what does the prince mean: "capulet, montague, see what a scourge is laid upon your hate, that heaven finds means to kill your joys with love."
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the feud killed their children
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t/f prince turned a blind eye towards the homicides and suicides surrounding romeo and juliet, and he pardoned everyone
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false there will be a trial for all those involved
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what are the 3 things a story must have in order to be a tragedy
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1. the main character (s) must be of noble birth
2. the main character (s) must be basically good people 3. the main chacacter(s) must have a tragic flaw that leads to their death or downfall |
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tragic flaw
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weakness in personality (pride, jealousy, vengeance)
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romeo and juliets tragic flaw?
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impatient
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ill bury thee in a triumphant grave, a grave o no a lanthorn, slaught'red youthWS
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romeo
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for here lies juliet and her beauty makes this vault a feasting presence full of light, death, lie thou there, by a dead man interred
WT WS |
romeo and personification
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death that hath sucked the honey of thy breath, hath had no power yet upon thy beauty thou art not conquered beauty's ensign yet is crimson in thy lips and in thy cheeks and death's pale flag is not advanced there
WT WS |
romeo and personification, death imagery, and dramatic irony
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ah dear juliet why art thou yet so fair shall i believe that unsubstantial death is amorous and that the lean aborred monster keeps thee here in dark to be his paramour?
WT WS |
romeo and death imagery and personification
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here here will i remain with worms that are thy chambermaids
WT WS |
romeo and metaphor
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come bitter conduct come unsavory guide thou desperate pilot now at once run on the dashing rocks thy seasick weary bark
WT WS |
romeo and nautical imagery
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thy drugs are quick. thus with a kiss i die
WT WS |
romeo and pun
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how oft tonight have my old feet stumbled at graves! whos there
WT WS |
friar and foreshadowing
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as i did sleep under this yew tree here i dreamt my master and another fought and that my master slew him
WT WS |
balthasar and dramatic irony
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o comfortable friar where is my lord i did remember well where i should be and there i am where is my romeo
WS |
juliet
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lady come from that nest of death contagion and innatural sleep a greater power than we can contradict hath thwarted our intents
WS |
friar
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come ill dispose of thee among a sisterhood of holy nuns
WS |
friar
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come go good juliet i dare no longer stay
WS |
friar (he's scared)
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this is thy sheath; there rust, and let me die
WS |
juliet
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here lies the county slain; and juliet bleeding, warm, and newly dead who here hath lain his 2 days buried. go tell the prince; run to the capulets; raise up the montagues; some others search
WT WS |
chief watchman and dramatic irony
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a great suspicion stay the friar too
WS |
chief watchman
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sovereign, here lies the county paris slain; and romeo dead; and juliet, dead before, warm and new killed
WS |
chief watchman
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this dagger hath mistaken for lo, his house is empty on the back of montague and it missheathed in my daughter's bosom
WT WS |
capulet and metaphor
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o me this sight of death is as a hell that warns my old age to a sepulcher
WT WS |
lady capulet and simile
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alas my liege my wife is dead tonight
WS |
montague
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seal up the mouth of outrage for a while till we can clear these ambiguities and know their spring their head their true descent; and then i will be general of your woes and lead you even to death. meantime forbear and let mischance be slave to patience. bring forth the parties of suspicion
WS |
prince
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i am the greatest, able to do least yet most suspected as the time and place doth make against me of this direful murder and here i stand both to impeach and purge myself condemned and myself excused
WS |
friar
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her nurse is privy; and if aught in this miscarried by my fault, let my old life be sacrificed some hour before his time unto the rigor of severest law
WS |
friar
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we still have known thee for a holy man
WS |
prince
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this letter he early bid me give his father and threatened me with death, going in the vault if i departed not and left him there
WS |
balthasar
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give me the letter i will look on it
WS |
prince
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he came with flowers to strew his lady's grave; and bid me stand aloof, and so i did
WS |
boy
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capulet, montague see what a scourge is laid upon your hate that heaven finds means to kill your joys with love
WS |
prince
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o broher montague give me thy hand
WS |
capulet
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for i will raise her statue in pure gold that whiles verona by that name is known there shall no figure at such rate be set as that of true and faithful juliet
WS |
montague
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as rich shall romeo's by his lady's lie poor sacrifices of our enmity
WS |
capulet
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the sun for sorrow will not show his head
WS |
prince
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some shall be pardoned and some punished
WS |
prince and there will be a trial
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for never was a story of more woe than this of juliet and her romeo
WT WS |
prince and rhyming couplet
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