4 Famous Romeo and Juliet Quotes
October 18, 2024
This article will discuss four important and famous quotes from Shakespeare鈥檚 . With 34 film adaptations, Romeo and Juliet is a standard of stage and screen. (Though my favorite version will always be banger starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Clare Danes.) I鈥檒l be the first to admit 鈥 it can be hard for modern readers to get past what seems like pure adolescent folly. (Here鈥檚 a summary if you need it.) The play becomes more interesting when one considers it as a trenchant exploration of the possibility of individual agency against societal and familial coercion.
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1) Prologue 鈥 鈥淭wo households, both alike in dignity,鈥
CHORUS.
Two households, both alike in dignity,
In fair Verona, where we lay our scene,
From ancient grudge break to new mutiny,
Where civil blood makes civil hands unclean.
From forth the fatal loins of these two foes
A pair of star-cross鈥檇 lovers take their life;
Whose misadventur鈥檇 piteous overthrows
Doth with their death bury their parents鈥 strife.
Imagine attending a performance of Romeo and Juliet without knowing the plot. The theater darkens as you take your seat. A single actor comes out on the stage and, with nary a 鈥渟poiler alert,鈥 proceeds to tell you the ending of the play. This is what happens in the quote above. To viewers today, this might be shocking. Indeed, it鈥檚 antithetical to the way we have been trained to value plot. Contrast this to Romeo and Juliet, where there is never any doubt as to the young lovers鈥 fate (鈥淎 pair of star-cross鈥檇 lovers take their life鈥).
Famous Romeo and Juliet Quotes (Continued)
At the same time, de-emphasizing the plot changes the way we read the text. Because we know what happens (lots and lots of death), our attention shifts to details that we might not have noticed if we were wondering what was going to happen to poor Romeo and Juliet. In other words, we can pay more attention to the 鈥渉ow鈥 of the play. We can wonder, 鈥淗ow do Romeo and Juliet arrive at their decision to kill themselves? and, 鈥淲hat structural conditions engender this choice?鈥 As a reader or viewer, we don鈥檛 generally expect the plot to be given away; at the same time, this spoiler reorients our attention to what is more important 鈥 the background of violence and power that crushes these two lovers.
2) Act I, Scene 4 鈥 Queen Mab Speech
MERCUTIO.
O, then, I see Queen Mab hath been with you.
She is the fairies鈥 midwife, and she comes
In shape no bigger than an agate-stone
On the fore-finger of an alderman,
Drawn with a team of little atomies
Over men鈥檚 noses as they lie asleep:
[…]
This is a thoroughly strange monologue. It starts reasonably enough (鈥淪he is the fairies鈥 midwife, and she comes / In shape no bigger than an agate-stone鈥), but, by the end, gets real weird. First, let鈥檚 review the context. This speech occurs in act 1, scene 4 as Romeo, Mercutio, and Benvolio are on their way to the Capulet鈥檚 ball. Remember that at this point in the play, Romeo is still pining over Rosaline. Though Mercutio tries to lift Romeo鈥檚 spirits, the latter declares mopily that, 鈥淯nder love鈥檚 heavy burden do I sink.鈥 (Don鈥檛 remember who these characters are? Here鈥檚 a list!)
Romeo and Juliet Quotes (Continued)
Now, we鈥檝e all had that friend who insists on moping on Friday night when their new crush leaves them. When Romeo tells Mercutio and Benvolio that he doesn鈥檛 want to go to the party (鈥溾檛is no wit to go鈥), I get the sense that Mercutio finally loses his patience with Romeo鈥檚 moping. When Mercutio asks why Romeo doesn鈥檛 want to go to the party, Romeo says because, 鈥淚 dreamt a dream tonight.鈥 (You can almost hear Mercutio鈥檚 eye-roll.)
Mercutio tells Romeo that he had a dream as well 鈥 that 鈥渄reamers often lie.鈥 Romeo tries to change the meaning of Mercutio鈥檚 assertion. He takes Mercutio鈥檚 鈥渄reamers often lie鈥 and turns it into 鈥淒reamers often lie鈥n bed asleep while they dream things true鈥. This is when Mercutio launches into his speech.
Famous Romeo and Juliet Quotes (Continued)
Before we get to the speech itself, it鈥檚 worth noting that it comes on the heels of a fundamental disagreement between Mercutio and Romeo. On the one hand, Romeo believes (perhaps naively) that dreams give the dreamer some access to some external, unvarnished truth. Mercutio has a dimmer view. As we will see, Mercutio holds dreams to be mere expressions of 鈥渧ain fantasy.鈥 In Mercutio鈥檚 view, dreams say little about truth and much about the unacknowledged desires of the dreamer. What鈥檚 more, it seems as if Mercutio looks askance at dreamers who attribute truth to their dreams rather than to their own baser desires.
As I said before, Mercutio鈥檚 speech starts benignly. Queen Mab is a tiny thing, 鈥渘o bigger than an agate-stone鈥 and her 鈥渃hariot is an empty hazelnut.鈥 It all sounds quite cute. And when Mercutio says that Queen Mab rides through the brains of lovers, courtiers, and lawyers, who dream, respectively, of love, curtsies, and fees, it still seems inoffensive. (Do note, however, that each person dreams of what they already want, not of some transcendent truth.)
Romeo and Juliet Quotes (Continued)
Then it starts to get a little weird 鈥 Mercutio mentions ladies 鈥渨ho straight on kisses dream.鈥 However, these ladies are 鈥渟oon with blisters plague[d]鈥 as 鈥渢heir breaths with sweetmeats tainted are.鈥 (While I wasn鈥檛 able to suss out the significance of 鈥渟weetmeats鈥, it鈥檚 clear that these ladies are being punished (with herpes blisters) for some aspect 鈥 likely sexual 鈥 of their desires.)
Mercutio then manages to rein it in for a moment 鈥 he talks about courtiers and parsons 鈥 but the weirdness quickly returns. According to Mercutio, Queen Mab makes soldiers dream of 鈥渃utting foreign throats鈥 and 鈥減lats the manes of horses in the night.鈥 Then, in a particularly weird moment, Mercutio starts talking about how Queen Mab gets maids ready for sex by giving them sex dreams (鈥減resses them, and learns them first to bear / Making them women of good carriage鈥). Thankfully, Romeo jumps in and stops him from saying any more.
Famous Romeo and Juliet Quotes (Continued)
The takeaway is that Mercutio has a decidedly skeptical understanding of dreams. While Romeo might believe that his dream (likely about Rosaline) to be weighted with some external portentousness, Mercutio throws it back on him. Whatever Romeo dreamt, Mercutio holds that it鈥檚 merely an expression of Romeo鈥檚 own 鈥渧ain fantasy.鈥 Furthermore, Romeo is a liar if he attributes his dreams to some outside truth rather than his own desires. I can鈥檛 help but think that if Romeo and Juliet had had a bit of Mercutio鈥檚 skepticism, they might not have ended up dead.
3) Act II, Scene 2 鈥 鈥淲herefore art thou Romeo?鈥
JULIET.
O Romeo, Romeo, wherefore art thou Romeo?
Deny thy father and refuse thy name.
Or if thou wilt not, be but sworn my love,
And I鈥檒l no longer be a Capulet.
[…]
鈥橳is but thy name that is my enemy;
Thou art thyself, though not a Montague.
What鈥檚 Montague? It is nor hand nor foot,
Nor arm, nor face, nor any other part
Belonging to a man. O be some other name.
What鈥檚 in a name? That which we call a rose
By any other name would smell as sweet;
So Romeo would, were he not Romeo call鈥檇,
Retain that dear perfection which he owes
Without that title. Romeo, doff thy name,
And for thy name, which is no part of thee,
Take all myself.
Famous Romeo and Juliet Quotes (Continued)
I鈥檇 be remiss if I didn鈥檛 talk about what is arguably the most famous scene in Romeo and Juliet. You鈥檙e probably familiar with it 鈥 Juliet, having just recently met Romeo at the Capulet鈥檚 ball, stands on her balcony while Romeo listens in the shadows below. The scene begins with Juliet opining that Romeo is a Montague. (Remember, 鈥渨herefore鈥 means 鈥渨hy.鈥) She wishes that he would renounce his family. If he can鈥檛 do that, she asks that he simply swear his love and she鈥檒l renounce her name.
What follows is a complex meditation on the nature of language and identity. Juliet begins by asserting that an individual has no intrinsic connection to their name (鈥淭hou art thyself, though not a Montague.鈥) She points out that there is nothing in the world that corresponds to the name 鈥淢ontague.鈥 As an example, she makes her famous declaration that 鈥渁 rose / By any other name would smell as sweet.鈥 In other words, names have no intrinsic connection to that which they refer 鈥 the reality of the world is unaffected by its naming. (You have to admit, it鈥檚 a fairly complex philosophical argument for a 13-year-old.) In conclusion, she asks Romeo once again to remove (鈥渄off鈥) his name and fashion a new nominative identity with her (鈥淎nd for thy name, which is no part of thee, / Take all myself.鈥)
Romeo and Juliet Quotes (Continued)
Juliet鈥檚 speech is also an assertion of agency against familial and societal expectations. (Recall that her family has promised her to Paris.) Don鈥檛 get me wrong 鈥 it鈥檚 hard not to roll your eyes at the adolescent sturm und drang of the play. Because the reader knows that Romeo and Juliet are going to die, there鈥檚 undeniable pathos in Juliet鈥檚 dreams of a life with Romeo outside the strictures of their warring families.
4) Act III, Scene 1 鈥 Fortune鈥檚 Fool
ROMEO.
O, I am fortune鈥檚 fool!
This quote speaks to Romeo鈥檚 troubled relationship with fate and fortune. Remember, we know exactly how this misadventure will end. As the chorus told us in the prologue, 鈥淸this] pair of star-cross鈥檇 lovers [will] take their life.鈥 This inevitability makes it important to pay attention to the way the play situates the characters in relation to this inevitability.
This quote, in which Romeo bemoans that he is 鈥渇ortune鈥檚 fool,鈥 comes just after he has killed Tybalt. At the beginning of this scene, Tybalt is still salty that Romeo showed up at the Capulet鈥檚 party. When Romeo walks up (having just married Juliet, Tybalt cousin), Tybalt immediately confronts him. Given that he is now related to Tybalt by marriage, Romeo does all he can to avoid a fight. Mercutio, ignorant of Romeo鈥檚 marriage, reads his refusal as cowardice. Not to be dishonored, Mercutio challenges Tybalt to a duel. As the two begin to fight, Romeo tries to step between them and Mercutio is stabbed.
Famous Romeo and Juliet Quotes (Continued)
Bevolio takes Mercutio offstage and Romeo muses on the effect of Juliet鈥檚 love on his conduct. He states that 鈥淸her] beauty hath made me effeminate / And in my temper soften鈥檇 valour鈥檚 steel.鈥 When Bevolio returns and tells Romeo that Mercutio is dead, Romeo challenges Tybalt to a duel and slays him. A crowd starts to gather and Benvolio urges Romeo to flee. Romeo then cries, 鈥淥, I am fortune鈥檚 fool.鈥
You can understand Romeo鈥檚 sentiment. He acted honorably, doing everything he could to avoid a fight with his wife鈥檚 cousin. What鈥檚 more, Romeo even tries to stop Mercutio from killing Tybalt. With Mercutio slain, Romeo again does the honorable thing and avenges his death. For me, Romeo鈥檚 line is interesting because it positions fate and fortune outside the bounds of honor. There are no social mores that guarantee good fortune.
Wrapping Up
When you find out that Juliet is only 13 years old and Romeo not much older, it can be hard to emotionally connect with this play. Then again, perhaps it takes two children to rage against the customs and coercive structures that adults take for granted. Maybe we can see Romeo and Juliet as a thought experiment that shows the necessity of questioning the societal status quo.
If you鈥檝e found this article useful or interesting, you can also check out my summaries and analyses of 1984, Frankenstein, The Great Gatsby, Hamlet, The Crucible, Beloved, Brave New World, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Macbeth, Jane Eyre, and Of Mice and Men.