Juliet goes through a wide range of emotions in Act 2 Scene 2. At first‚ she sighs and says‚ "ay me" showing that she is wistful‚ dreamy and obviously thinking about Romeo. Juliet gets annoyed with the whole situation as she is thinking aloud to herself about how unfortunately she is a Capulet and Romeo is a Montague. "Deny thy father‚ and refuse thy name; Or‚ if thou will not‚ be but sworn my love‚ And I’ll no longer be a Capulet." This shows her desperation and frustration with the circumstances
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Juliet‚ William Shakespeare uses oxymoron and irony to show what the emotion of love can do and that rivalries can be broken by love. In the beginning of the novel‚ Romeo and Juliet fall in love‚ unknowing of their families feud. Being a Montague‚ Romeo could never fall in love with a Capulet. Thus‚ it was frowned upon by both families. In Act 1‚ Scene 5‚ Shakespeare uses dramatic irony to show that Juliet is in love with her enemy. It is dramatic irony because the readers know something the characters
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What happens in Act 3 Scene 1? It is a crucial scene‚ a turning point and it determines the rest of the action. It is a tense and exciting scene for the audience and tragic at the same time. In this scene‚ soon after Romeo and Juliet secret marriage‚ Tybalt kills Mercutio and then Romeo kills Mercutio to take revenge. Then‚ Romeo is banished from Verona. Paragraph1: Why were tension and excitement created? Mercutio is not in a good mood but he is in argumentative mood‚ he seems angry
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Act III- Irony During Act III of The Crucible‚ by Arthur Miller; the central way that Miller depicts the corruption rooted within Salem is through the usage of the literary device‚ irony. The usage of personal pronouns within this work of literature seems to indicate a sense of power that the citizens have‚ versus the power found within the unknown. Parris says the following in order to encourage Mary Warren to cast out the devil‚ “ Cast the devil out! Look him in the face! Trample him! We’ll
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Act V Journal Option 1: Part 1. Find an example in Act IV where Hamlet acknowledges his fate. Part 2. What are your own thoughts on death? Are you afraid of death? I think death is something very mysterious to our society and something that everyone thinks or wonders about sometime in their life. I think some people spend a large amount of time worrying and trying to decipher what happens after death‚ when in the long run it will never really mattered anyways. Everyone
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still wrapped. The scene shifts back to Lola and the aristocrat can be seen again talking to a group of people. This time when Lola goes by‚ she knocks off the hat of the aristocrat and says to him in German‚ “Go back to where you came from”. The man shivers in fear and walks away embarrassed. Lola then heads to the Brandenburg Gate. The women dressed in green are still conjured together‚ but Lola notices they are more hostile.
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My Last Duchess Browning’s use of dramatic irony can be seen in the dramatic monologue of the Duke. The Duke views himself as a powerful person with “a nine-hundred-years-old name” while the reader views him as possessive. His tone is very possessive and haughty as he talks about how disgusted he was with the Duchess. The diction makes the Duke sound like he begins to rush what he says about the Duchess as he thinks more about her. His sentences are moving along as his train of thought goes on
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Introduction In act 1 scene II we are introduced to the group of actors (Bottom‚ Quince‚ Flute‚ Snout‚ Snug and Starveling) who have joined together at Peter Quince’s house to discuss the parts they will play for the Duke and Duchess. The story is set in ancient Greece‚ Athens where two lovers (Hermia and Lysander) are forbidden to marry each other. Instead‚ Hermia must marry Demetrius. However‚ Demetrius’s lover (Helena‚ Hermia’s best friend) is heart-broken to hear the news. Lysander and Hermia
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How does Act 1 Scene 1 succeed in arresting the audience’s attention and provide the exposition to the play? It is clear that Shakespeare was eager to set the scene and plant the audience in the world of the play with the opening word “Boatswain”. This first word immediately transports the audience on to the deck of the ship‚ ready for adventure. With the master’s second remark the audience finds itself in the eye of the storm. “We run ourselves aground”. The effect of these words on the audience
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tragedy‚ Romeo and Juliet‚ set in 15th century Verona‚ tells the story of two star-crossed lovers‚ who find each other in the midst of violence and rivalry fuelled by an ancient feud between their families. Within the well-known balcony scene in Act 2‚ Scene 2‚ both characters use a variety of imagery‚ including cosmic and celestial‚ that which relates to objects and scenery outside of our planet‚ in the sky and universe. These choices of imagery tell us about the ideas and perspectives that Shakespeare
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