🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
Romeo arranges a secret marriage with Juliet through the Nurse while his friends remain unaware of his new love, and Juliet anxiously awaits the Nurse's return with Romeo's message.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- Scene 4 setup: Benvolio and Mercutio search for Romeo, unaware he has abandoned Rosaline for Juliet; Tybalt has challenged Romeo to a duel.
- The secret plan: Romeo tells the Nurse to have Juliet come to Friar Lawrence's cell that afternoon for confession and marriage, and promises to send a rope ladder for their wedding night.
- Mercutio's mockery: Mercutio believes Romeo is still lovesick over Rosaline and mocks both Romeo's weakness and Tybalt's pretentious fencing style.
- Scene 5 tension: Juliet waits impatiently for three hours; the Nurse delays revealing Romeo's message, complaining of exhaustion and soreness.
- Common confusion: Romeo keeps his friends in the dark about Juliet—they still think he pines for Rosaline, creating dramatic irony.
🎭 Scene 4: The morning after
🔍 Romeo's disappearance
- Benvolio reports that Romeo never came home the previous night.
- Mercutio assumes "that same pale, hard-hearted wench, that Rosaline, torments him so."
- Romeo's friends have no idea he has moved on to Juliet.
⚔️ Tybalt's challenge
- Tybalt (a Capulet kinsman) has sent a letter to Romeo's father's house.
- Mercutio and Benvolio recognize it as a challenge to a duel.
- Mercutio worries Romeo is too weakened by love to face Tybalt: "he is already dead: stabbed with a white wench's black eye."
🤺 Mercutio's contempt for Tybalt
Mercutio describes Tybalt as an overly formal, pretentious duelist:
- "The courageous Captain of Compliments"—fights by the book, keeping perfect time and distance.
- "The very butcher of a silk button"—precise but showy.
- Trained at "the very first house" (a prestigious fencing school).
- Uses Italian fencing terms: "passado," "punto reverso," "hay."
- Mercutio mocks these "fashion-mongers" and "fanasticoes" who care more about style than substance.
Don't confuse: Mercutio's criticism is not about Tybalt's skill but his affected, rule-bound manner—he sees Tybalt as all form, no authenticity.
💬 Banter and wordplay
🎪 Romeo's return to wit
- When Romeo arrives, Mercutio continues mocking him for being lovesick.
- Romeo engages in rapid-fire puns and jokes with Mercutio.
- Mercutio is delighted: "Why, is not this better now than groaning for love? Now art thou sociable; now art thou Romeo."
- Key point: Romeo's playful mood convinces his friends he is recovering, but they don't know the real reason—his love for Juliet.
🗣️ The pun battle
The friends trade elaborate jokes:
- "Counterfeit" (fake coin / ditching them)
- "Slip" (counterfeit coin / giving them the slip)
- "Goose" (sex worker / fool)
- "Broad" (wide / fat / promiscuous woman)
- "Cheveril" (stretchy leather, like their flexible wit)
Example: Romeo says his wit is "well served to a sweet goose," playing on multiple meanings of "goose."
👵 The Nurse's arrival
🎯 Romeo's instructions
- The Nurse enters with her servant Peter.
- Mercutio mocks the Nurse crudely, making sexual jokes about her appearance and the time of day.
- Romeo pulls the Nurse aside and gives her the plan:
The marriage plan:
- Juliet should come to Friar Lawrence's cell that afternoon for confession ("shrift").
- There she will be married ("shrived and married").
- Romeo will send his servant with a rope ladder ("cords made like a tackled stair") so he can climb to Juliet's window that night.
- Romeo offers the Nurse money for her trouble; she initially refuses but he insists.
🛡️ The Nurse's concerns
- She warns Romeo not to "lead her in a fool's paradise"—don't deceive Juliet.
- She asks if Romeo's servant can keep a secret: "Two may keep counsel, putting one away" (a proverb: two can only keep a secret if one is absent or dead).
- Romeo assures her his man is "as true as steel."
💐 The Nurse's chatter
- The Nurse rambles about Paris, another nobleman who wants to marry Juliet.
- She says Juliet "would happily see a toad" rather than Paris.
- She mentions rosemary (a symbol of remembrance) and fumbles words like "sententious" (she means "sentence").
- Why it matters: The Nurse's loyalty to Juliet is clear—she supports the secret marriage despite the family feud.
⏳ Scene 5: Juliet's impatience
🕐 The long wait
- Juliet sent the Nurse at 9 a.m.; the Nurse promised to return in half an hour.
- By noon (three hours later), the Nurse still hasn't returned.
- Juliet complains that "Love's heralds should be thoughts / Which ten times faster glide than the sun's beams."
- She imagines that if the Nurse were young, she would move "as swift in motion as a ball."
Don't confuse: Juliet is not angry at the Nurse; she is anxious and frustrated by the slow passage of time.
😩 The Nurse's delay
- When the Nurse finally arrives, Juliet begs for news: "O, honey Nurse, what news? Hast thou met with him?"
- The Nurse stalls, complaining she is tired, her bones ache, and she is out of breath.
- The scene ends mid-sentence as Juliet presses for information.
| Character | Emotional state | Why |
|---|
| Juliet | Anxious, impatient | Desperate to know if Romeo will marry her |
| Nurse | Exhausted, teasing | Enjoys drawing out the suspense, but also genuinely tired |
Example: The Nurse says "O, Lord, why lookest thou sad?" but does not immediately answer Juliet's question—this builds tension and shows the Nurse's tendency to ramble and delay.
🎭 Dramatic irony and secrecy
🤐 What Romeo's friends don't know
- Mercutio and Benvolio still believe Romeo is pining for Rosaline.
- They have no idea he met Juliet at the Capulet party or that he plans to marry her.
- This creates dramatic irony: the audience knows the truth, but the characters on stage do not.
🪜 The secret marriage plan
- Only Romeo, Juliet, the Nurse, and Friar Lawrence know about the wedding.
- The rope ladder is a practical detail: Romeo will use it to climb to Juliet's room after the ceremony.
- Why secrecy matters: The Montague-Capulet feud makes an open marriage impossible; the lovers must act in secret to avoid their families' "rancor."
Don't confuse: The Nurse is complicit in the secret, not a passive messenger—she actively helps Romeo and Juliet despite the risk.