about Juliets marriage to Paris
Lady Capulet brings the news of Capulet's suit for Juliet, Paris, and how they are soon to be wed (Thursday morn).
Lady Capulet brings the news that Juliet has been proposed to by Paris and that they have arranged for Juliet to marry him. She believes this will bring great happiness and prosperity to their family.
Lady Capulet tells Juliet that she has arranged for her to marry Paris.
Juliet feels very angry at first but soon seems to calm down. This is because she knows why Romeo did it and she understands.
The nurse tells Juliet that her cousin, Tybalt, has been killed and Romeo has been banished from Verona.
Act 3 scene 5 of Romeo and Juliet is set in Juliet's room. Romeo is leaving for his exile and Juliet is upset over the separation. Lady Capulet then comes into Juliet's room and informs her that she will be marrying Paris. The conflict is that Juliet's parents are forcing her to marry Paris and she is already married to Romeo.
she tells lady Capulet that she will not marry Paris she will marry romeoLady Capulet calls to her daughter. Juliet wonders why her mother would come to speak to her so early in the morning. Unaware that her daughter is married to Romeo, Lady Capulet enters the room and mistakes Juliet's tears as continued grief for Tybalt. Lady Capulet tells Juliet of her deep desire to see "the villain Romeo" dead (3.5.80). In a complicated bit of punning every bit as impressive as the sexual punning of Mercutio and Romeo, Juliet leads her mother to believe that she also wishes Romeo's death, when in fact she is firmly stating her love for him. Lady Capulet tells Juliet about Capulet's plan for her to marry Paris on Thursday, explaining that he wishes to make her happy. Juliet is appalled. She rejects the match, saying "I will not marry yet; and when I do, I swear / It shall be Romeo-whom you know I hate- / Rather than Paris" (3.5.121-123). Capulet enters the chamber. When he learns of Juliet's determination to defy him he becomes enraged and threatens to disown Juliet if she refuses to obey him. When Juliet entreats her mother to intercede, her mother denies her help.After Capulet and Lady Capulet storm away, Juliet asks her nurse how she might escape her predicament. The Nurse advises her to go through with the marriage to Paris-he is a better match, she says, and Romeo is as good as dead anyhow. Though disgusted by her nurse's disloyalty, Juliet pretends to agree, and tells her nurse that she is going to make confession at Friar Lawrence's. Juliet hurries to the friar, vowing that she will never again trust the Nurse's counsel. If the friar is unable to help her, Juliet comments to herself, she still has the power to take her own life.
Juliet says she hadn't thought much about marriage."It is an honour that I dream not of." She is open to the idea though."I'll look to love if looking liking move."
Romeo murdered Tybalt Capulet (Juliet's cousin).The chasing scene begins when Romeo returns to Verona Beach after hearing about the tragic news of Juliet.
Lady Capulet mistakenly thinks her daughter will be overjoyed that she has received her first proposal of marriage from Paris. Juliet, who is madly in love with Romeo, is not at all happy to hear the news. In fact, this announcements sets the events in play that will bring about the play's ultimate tragedy.
In Act 3, Scene 5 of Romeo and Juliet, Juliet tells her mother that she eagerly awaits news of her future husband. While Lady Capulet assumes Juliet is referring to Paris, Juliet is actually talking about Romeo, demonstrating her wit and deception by using ambiguous language to mislead her parents about her true feelings. This double entendre adds depth to Juliet's character as she navigates the complexities of her forbidden romance.