Act 4, Scene 2 Act 4, Scene 3 Act 4, Scene 4 Act 4, Scene 5 Act 5, Scene 1 Act 5, Scene 2 Act 5, Scene 3 Get the entireRomeo and JulietLitChart as a printable PDF. "My students can't get enough of your charts and their results have gone through the roof." -Graham S. ...
Act 4, Scene 3 Act 4, Scene 4 Act 4, Scene 5 Act 5, Scene 1 Act 5, Scene 2 Act 5, Scene 3 Get the entireRomeo and JulietLitChart as a printable PDF. "My students can't get enough of your charts and their results have gone through the roof." -Graham S. ...
Act 5, Scene 3 ...her forever. He embraces Juliet and kisses her one last time, then takes out thepoison, drinks it, and dies, remarking how “quick” the apothecary’s drugs are.(full context) ...She looks upon Romeo’s corpse and, seeing a cup in his hand, realizes he haspoiso...
The friar urges the nurse to return to Juliet and tell her that Romeo is coming for her. The nurse... (full context) Act 3, Scene 5 ...dawn and laments that as “more light” breaks, his and Juliet’s troubles grow “dark[er.]” The nurse enters and announces that Lady ...
In Act 5, Scene 3 of Romeo and Juliet, Romeo discovers Juliet's sleeping body in the Capulet tomb. Juliet took a sleeping potion in order to make her parents think she was dead, so that she could avoid marrying her suitor Paris and remain with Romeo, whom she married in a secret cere...
In Act 1, Scene 5, Olivia criticizes Malvolio for his narcissism, which she believes is making him unwell: Olivia: O, you are sick of self-love, Malvolio, and taste Cite this Quote with a distempered appetite. During the Renaissance, the disease of melancholy was specifically associated wi...
In an address to her father in Act 4, Scene 2 ofRomeo and Juliet, Juliet uses anadiplosis to plea for forgiveness for her disobedience. In this case, the plea is actually an act, part of her scheme to flee with Romeo, but anadiplosis makes her begging all the more dramatic and convinci...
Emma later references Romeo and Juliet in Chapter 46, when discussing Jane Fairfax’s behavior during her secret engagement to Frank: “Much, indeed!” cried Emma, feelingly. “If a woman can ever be excused for thinking only of herself, it is in a situation like Jane Fairfax’s.—Of su...
He regards this good timing as an act of fate and decides that he must go through with this scheme. At this moment, the narrator describes him, in a simile, as being “like a man condemned to death.” This simile suggests that Raskolnikov is, in some sense, being pulled towards his...
Metaphor in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet Romeo uses the following metaphor in Act 2 Scene 2 of Romeo and Juliet, after sneaking into Juliet's garden and catching a glimpse of her on her balcony: But, soft! what light through yonder window breaks? It is the east, and Juliet is the ...