Romeo is the first of the two to speak.
Romeo does not recite a poem to Juliet. When they first speak to each other, their dialogue forms a poem, but they are not reciting, just talking.
In most of Shakespeare's plays, commoners speak in prose and nobles in poetry. Rhyme is reserved for the most heightened passion or feeling. In "Romeo and Juliet," Romeo and Juliet both speak in rhyme when they talk to each other - the first 14 lines they speak together form a sonnet. When they discuss each other, they also speak in rhyme, like Juliet's soliloquy before she drinks the poison - she rhymes there.
The Nurse. :)
Peter and the musicians.
Romeo is the first of the two to speak in Rome and Julietby William Shakespeare. Romeo's first line is, "Is the day so young?"
Romeo is the first of the two to speak.
Romeo "Is the day so young?"
Romeo speaks before Juliet however Sampson is the first to speak in the play
First speaks Romeo, in Act I. Scene I. Romeo: "Is the day so young?"
Lady Capulet.
It approximates the way people speak in normal conversation
The Prologue is the first to speak: "Two households, both alike in dignity..." If you mean which of the characters, Romeo or Juliet speaks first, it is Romeo in Act I scene 1. Juliet does not appear until Act I scene 3
Romeo does not recite a poem to Juliet. When they first speak to each other, their dialogue forms a poem, but they are not reciting, just talking.
In most of Shakespeare's plays, commoners speak in prose and nobles in poetry. Rhyme is reserved for the most heightened passion or feeling. In "Romeo and Juliet," Romeo and Juliet both speak in rhyme when they talk to each other - the first 14 lines they speak together form a sonnet. When they discuss each other, they also speak in rhyme, like Juliet's soliloquy before she drinks the poison - she rhymes there.
Romeo speaks of the nightingale in William Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet." He mistakenly believes that the bird's song is the morning lark, signaling that it is time for him to leave Juliet before being discovered. This misunderstanding leads to tragic consequences for the young lovers.
The nurse wants to talk to Romeo to deliver a message from Juliet in Shakespeare's play Romeo and Juliet. Romeo asks the nurse to tell Juliet to meet him at Friar Laurence's cell that afternoon so they can get married.