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Romeo and Juliet, Schemes and Mind Maps of English Literature

Shakespeare's Romeo & Juliet Study Guide ... What oxymoron does Juliet speak to Romeo as he is leaving? (line 199-201) How is it an oxymoronic situation?

Typology: Schemes and Mind Maps

2022/2023

Uploaded on 02/28/2023

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Download Romeo and Juliet and more Schemes and Mind Maps English Literature in PDF only on Docsity! Name: Ms. Lopez Date: Period: Study Guide William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet "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-crossed lovers take their life; Whose misadventured piteous overthrows Doth with their death bury their parents' strife. The fearful passage of their death-marked love, And the continuance of their parents' rage, Which, but their children's end, naught 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." -The Prologue Shakespeare's Romeo & Juliet Study Guide ACT I Scene i “Here’s much to do with hate, but more with love.” (1.1.180) 1. What is meant by the term "star-crossed" lovers? (Prologue line 6) 2. How is Benvolio different from Tybalt when it comes to fighting? 3. According to Prince Escalus, what will be the penalty if the Montagues or Capulets fight in the streets again? 4. What does this first scene reveal about Romeo’s behavior? Why is he melancholy? 5. An oxymoron is an effect that is caused by combining two contradictory ideas, such as “pretty ugly.” Romeo, the unhappy lover, talks in oxymorons. Find two examples. What is he talking about? Why are contradictions appropriate? 4. This scene ends with foreshadowing (a clue to what will happen next). What does Romeo fear at the end of this scene? (for my mind misgives / Some consequence … lines 113-4) Scene v “My only love sprung from my only hate!” (1.5.152) 1. Tybalt believes Romeo has come to the Capulet party to “scorn at our solemnity.” (line 71) What does Tybalt want to do? How is this ironic? 2. Both Romeo and Juliet were reluctant to attend the ball. How is this ironic? 3. When Tybalt asks for his rapier, Lord Capulet stops him. Why? 4. When Romeo sees Juliet, with what does he first compare her? (metaphors and similes abound) 5. Why does Romeo say, “My life is my foe’s debt” when he discovers Juliet is a Capulet? 6. Why does Juliet say, “my grave is like to be my wedding bed?” (line 149) How is this ironic foreshadowing? ACT II Scene i “He jests at scars that never felt a wound” (2.2.1) 1. Why does Romeo stick around instead of going home with Mercutio and Benvolio? 2. Do Mercutio and Benvolio know about Juliet? Prove it. Scene ii “Yet I should kill thee with much cherishing.” (2.2.198) 1. What images does Romeo compare Juliet to? (metaphors and similes abound) 2. How does Romeo find out that Juliet has fallen deeply in love with him? 3. What does Juliet mean by saying, “That which we call a rose / By any other word would smell as sweet?” (lines 46-47) 4. Why does Juliet ask Romeo not to swear by the moon? (lines 114+) 5. Juliet hesitates and says, “It is too rash, too unadvised, too sudden; / Too like the lightning which doth cease to be / Ere one can say it lightens?” (lines 125-7) She refers to their love as “This bud of love …” (line 128). What does she mean by this simile and metaphor? 6. What do Romeo and Juliet plan for tomorrow evening? 7. What oxymoron does Juliet speak to Romeo as he is leaving? (line 199-201) How is it an oxymoronic situation? Scene iii “Wisely and slow. They stumble that run fast.” (2.3.101) 1. To what does Friar Laurence compare mankind in his soliloquy? ACT III Scene i “O, I am fortune’s fool!” (3.1.142) 1. Who begins the fight in this scene? 2. Mercutio says, “Ask for me tomorrow and you shall find me a grave man” (lines 101- 102). Explain the pun and discuss what this reveals about Mercutio’s character. 3. Who is killed by whom in this scene? 4. Why wouldn’t Romeo fight Tybalt? Why did Romeo finally fight Tybalt? 5. Why does Romeo cry out, “O, I am fortune’s fool” (line 142)? What is meant or implied about the role of fate or free will in this statement? 6. What punishment does Prince Escalus give to Romeo? Scene ii “—to speak that word Is father, mother, Tybalt, Romeo, Juliet, All slain, all dead.” (3.2.133-5) 1. Find examples of the poetic devices Juliet uses when she speaks while waiting for Romeo. a) Allusion: b) Metaphor: c) Personification: d) Simile: 2. At first, who does Juliet think is dead? 3. How does Juliet speak of Romeo when she learns he slew Tybalt? Quote two of the oxymorons she uses. 4. How does Juliet react when the Nurse says, “Shame come to Romeo” (line 98)? 5. What does Juliet give the Nurse to bring to Romeo to show she still loves him? Scene iii “Heaven is here, Where Juliet lives; and … … every unworthy thing, Live[s] here in heaven and may look on her; But Romeo may not.” (3.3.31-5) 1. When Romeo learns he is to be banished, how does he react? 2. What advice and arguments does Friar Laurence give to Romeo? 3. What is the Friar’s plan for that night and the future? 2. Give at least one example of verbal irony when Juliet is talking to Paris. (Quote it) 3. What does the Friar plan for Juliet do she doesn’t have to marry Paris? Scenes ii and iii “I’ll have this knot knit up tomorrow morning.” (4.2.25) “Romeo, Romeo, Romeo! … I drink to thee.” (4.3.59-60) 1. How does Juliet behave towards her parents now? 2. What does Capulet happily and impulsively do? 3. What doubts does Juliet have about taking the potion? Scenes iv and v “Death lies on her like an untimely frost Upon the sweetest flower of all the field.” (4.5.33-4) 1. Why may the hustle and bustle of the wedding be described as ironic? 2. How do Lord and Lady Capulet mourn Juliet’s death? How does the Nurse mourn? 3. How does Lord Capulet use personification in regards to death (lines 44-45)? 4. Why didn’t Juliet confide in the Nurse about her supposed “death?” 5. What does Friar Laurence tell the mourning family about Juliet’s death? ACT V Scene i “Well, Juliet, I will lay with thee tonight.” (5.1.37) 1. What did Romeo dream about? 2. What does Balthasar tell Romeo? 3. What does Romeo mean when he says, “I defy you, stars!” (line 24) 4. How does Romeo convince the apothecary to sell him the illegal drug? Scene ii “Poor living cor[p]se, enclosed in a dead man’s tomb!” (5.2.30) 1. What happened to Friar John on the way to Mantua? 2. What does Friar Laurence then plan to do and how does it renew our hopes? Scene iii “Thus with a kiss I die” (5.3.120) 1. Why is Paris at Juliet’s tomb? 2. What does Paris think killed Juliet? 3. Why does Paris wish to kill Romeo? 4. What happens to Paris? What does Romeo realize about him?
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