Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Extract 6
- Act 3 Scene 1
- Significance of extract
- Climax of whole play
- First death of the
whole play!
- Beginning of tragedy
- Foreshadowed by Friar
Lawrence's speech
- An avalanche of deaths that
will continue until the end of
the play
- Details
- Dramatic Irony
- Romeo tries to tell Tybalt
about his love for Juliet
- Tybalt, blinded by anger,
refuses to listen
- Attempts to resolve conflict
only instil it further
- Creates a sense of irony, heightens
tension in the conflict
- Quotes:
- Tybalt
- 'Thou art a villain'
- Blaming Romeo for causing
humiliation towards him
- Shocking remark
- Exponential rise in
tension in the play
- 'Boy, this shall not excuse the injuries
that thou has done to me, therefore
turn and draw'
- 'Boy'
- Refers to a person
of lower status
- Insulting Romeo's
pride
- 'Injuries'
- Referring to the humiliation
he received in Act 1 Scene 5
- Lord Capulet called him a...
- 'Princox'
- 'Goodman boy'
- Insolent boy
- Characterizes Tybalt as a man with
lasting and ignitable temperament
- Romeo
- 'Reason that I have to love thee
Doth much excuse the appertaining
rage
- Romeo offers a draw
immediately for peace
- Ironically, Tybalt does
not know about the
reason why
- Tybalt continues to
escalate the conflict
- 'And so good Capulet, which name I tender
As dearly as my own, be satisfied.
- Refers back to Act 2 Scene 2
- Romeo offers to give up
his name for Juliet
- Sacrificing family
pride for love
- Suggests the passive
nature of Romeo
- Humbled by love
- Characterization
- For conflict
- Mercutio
- 'O calm dishonourable, vile submission!'
- Acted as a catalyst
to the conflict
- Regarded Romeo as
dishonourable and too
passive
- 'Come sir, your passado'
- Ignores Romeo's
attempts to keep peace
- Tybalt
- Bears a grudge against Romeo
- Quick to take action,
but slow to listen
- Against conflict
- Romeo
- Passive, anti-conflict
- Humbled by love
- A sense of empathy is felt for Romeo as his
good-natured attempts to extinguish the inferno fails