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Answer: The scene opens early on Wednesday morning. The Nurse enters Juliet's room and discovers her seemingly lifeless body on the bed. The Nurse tries to wake her, but believing her to be dead, cries out to the family in desperation. The Capulet's, Friar Laurence, and Paris enter the room in response to the Nurse's cries. They dramatically mourn Juliet's loss while the Friar maintains his deception by offering words of support about Divine Will, comforting the family by expressing the belief that Juliet is in heaven. He then arranges for Juliet's body to be taken to the family vault. Capulet orders that the wedding preparations be changed to funeral preparations. The scene concludes with a comic interlude between the wedding musicians and Peter, a Capulet servant, as they engage in bawdy wordplay.
Analysis-
The Nurse opens this scene by bantering humorously — almost giddy in her hope and good humor as she speaks with brassy references to Juliet's wedding night. The Nurse anticipates that Juliet will get little sleep that night. The viewer knows, however, that the euphoria will be short-lived and that unspeakable sorrow awaits the Nurse. In the Capulet household, moods tend to change quickly. When the Nurse discovers Juliet's body, the tone of the scene immediately changes from excited anticipation to shocked sorrow.
Romeo and Juliet again are ensnared in the love/death/marriage matrix that has defined and described their relationship from the beginning. Lady Capulet's chilling words echo loudly here, "I would the fool were married to her grave" (III.5.141). Capulet, who earlier referred to his daughter as carrion, speaks his most eloquent lines in the play, "Death lies on her like untimely frost / Upon the sweetest flower of all the field." Recall Act I, Scene 2, when Capulet says "the earth hath swallowed all my hopes but she." These passages blend the Friar's concept of nature as a cyclical force taking life to give life.
Capulet bemoans the loss of his last hope; however, in a macabre mix of sex and death, he describes Juliet's death as a sexual experience, emphasizing the Elizabethan translation of death as sexual ecstasy. He tells Paris that death has taken Juliet's virginity: "There she lies / Flower as she was / deflowered by him." This passage echoes Juliet's woeful proclamation in Act III, Scene 2 "I'll to my bed; / And death, not Romeo, take my maidenhead!" (III.2.137). Capulet continues saying "Death is my son-in-law." These images mournfully anticipate the consummation of Romeo and Juliet's deaths in the final act of the play.
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The County Paris hath set up his rest
That you shall rest but little.—God forgive me, - saying that Paris will wake her up she’s sure, use Spark Notes for modern English against the Shakespearean x
That you shall rest but little.—God forgive me, - saying that Paris will wake her up she’s sure, use Spark Notes for modern English against the Shakespearean x