Mercutio; simile | who said this/ literary device?’tis not so deep as a well, not so wide as a church door, but ’tis enough, ’twill serve. |
Pun and foreshadowing. (Pun on the word grave, as in “grave” = serious and “grave” = tomb) | literary devices? (2)”Ask for me tomorrow, and you shall find me a grave man.” |
Light/dark motif and foreshadowing | literary devices? (2)”This day’s black fate on most days doth depend;/This but begins the woe others must end.” |
personification | who said this/ literary device?”O, I am fortune’s fool.” |
Mantua | where is romeo banished to? |
He will be executed. | what will happen if romeo returns home after being banished? |
Verona, Italy | where does this story take place? |
classical illusion | what is this an example of?”Gallop apace, you fiery-footed steeds./ Toward Phoebus’ lodging! Such a wagoner/As Phaeton would whip you to the West” |
personification, light-dark motif | literary devices? (2)”Come, civil night,/Thou sober-suited matron, all in black” |
motif | literary device?”come, Romeo, come; thou day in night” |
motif | literary device? “For thou wilt lie upon the wings of night/Whiter than new snow on a raven’s back” |
personification | literary device?”come, loving, black-browed night” |
pun | literary device?”And that bare vowel “I” shall poison more/Than the death-darting eye of a cockatrice.” |
oxymoron | what is being used here? “O serpent hear, hid with a flow’ring face!/Did ever dragon keep so fair a cave?/Beautiful tyrant! Fiend angelical! Dove-feathered raven! Wolvish-ravening lamb!” |
extended metaphor; comparing romeo to a book | what is being used here, what is it comparing?”Was ever book containing such vile matter/So fairly bound?” |
a ring | what does juliet send with the nurse to give to romeo? |
banishment | what do romeo and juliet think is worse than death? |
pun | literary device?This may flies do, when I from this must fly.” |
1) Juliet is alive; 2) He is alive (if he had not killed Tybalt, Tybalt would have killed him); 3) He has gotten the sentence of banishment and not execution | what are the three reasons Friar Lawrence tells romeo that he should be thankful? |
Saturday night | when was the capulet’s party? |
sunday | when were romeo and juliet married? |
sunday afternoon | when are mercutio and tybalt killed? |
sunday night | when is romeo and juliet’s wedding night? |
monday at dawn | what day is it when scene 4 of act 3 starts? |
Thursday | what day is paris and juliet’s wedding set for? |
personification | literary device?”. . . jocund day/Stands tiptoe on the misty mountain tops” |
motif | literary device?”More light and light—more dark and dark our woes!” |
alliteration, personification | literary devices? (2)”O Fortune, Fortune! All men call thee fickle,/If thou art fickle, what dost thou with him/That is renowned for faith?” |
dramatic/ verbal irony | what is juliet’s conversation with her mother an example of? |
verbal, dramatic irony | what is this an example of?”Indeed I never shall be satisfied/With Romeo till I behold him—dead–/Is my poor heart so for a kinsman vexed.” |
foreshadowing | literary device?”I would the fool were married to her grave.” |
he wants to hit Juliet | what does capulet mean when he says, “My fingers itch.” |
the nurse tells her to just marry Paris | what does the nurse suggest juliet do after being threatened by her father to marry paris? |
verbal irony | literary device?”Well, thou has comforted me marvelous much.” |
Tybalt | who kills mercutio? |
Romeo | who kills tybalt? |
decides to exile him from verona instead of the death penalty | what does the prince Escalus decide to do with romeo? |
romeo’s banishment | what does juliet claim is worse than 10,000 slain tybalts? |
Romeo will visit Juliet that night, but make sure to leave her chamber, and Verona, before the morning. He will then reside in Mantua until things are settled down. | what is friar lawrence’s plan? |
He will disown her. | what does capulet threaten to do to juliet if she does not marry paris? |
Act 3 Romeo and Juliet Owen 9th
November 16, 2019