What does he then tell Paris? What problem does the servant have? Rosaline What does the Capulet servant ask Romeo to read for him? They discuss who Juliet is to marry and that she needs to look at Paris at the party. He crashed the party. He wasn't invited. They weren't invited. Single Men So they can woo women.
They went with Mercutio, who was invited. The servant with the invitations cannot read, and so asks Romeo to read the list of people to whom the invitations are to be sent. He cant read. Rosaline is one of the people invited to the party, and at that point Romeo still had a crush on Rosaline. A Capulet servant could not read the guest list to the party that his master gave him. So coming upon Romeo and Benvolio, he asks Romeo if he could read. Romeo read the list for the servant and sees Rosalins's name.
He asks the servant where they will be and the servant says that ' Which of course they were. Romeo was not invited to the Capulets' party. He crashed it. So did Benvolio. Both of these guys were Montagues and were not invited or expected to attend. Mercutio, on the other hand, is a relative of the Prince and was invited his name is on the guestlist if you want to check it out.
It is possible that Romeo and Benvolio got in on Mercutio's ticket. Or it is possible that the security at the door wasn't very tight. A servant of the Capulet's encounters Mercutio, Romeo, and Benvolio on the road. He asks them to read the party list since he can't read bit stupid of the Capulets, don't you think and Romeo spots Rosaline's2 name on the list, and asks to be invited. The servant doesn't know that they were Montagues, so they were invited.
He was the only person invited. He learns that there is to be a party at Capulet's and Rosaline is invited. Rosaline was on the guestlist. If she hadn't been, Romeo wouldn't have bothered showing up.
Rosaline was invited because she is a Capulet, Juliet's cousin. An illiterate servant of the Capulets, wanting to know whose names were on the list, asked Romeo to read it to him, since Romeo looked like the kind of guy who would know how to read.
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Paris is about half-right. We don't know how happy they were about it, but it's true that girls could be married off at a very young age.
However, it wasn't the norm. In the England of Shakespeare's time, the average age of women on their wedding day was between nineteen and twenty. Shakespeare himself married when he was eighteen and his bride was twenty-six. Paris' argument doesn't carry much weight with Capulet, who replies, "And too soon marr'd are those so early made" 1. Capulet may be thinking about more than the psychological effects of early marriage.
Childbirth was dangerous for both the mother and the baby, and Capulet has had some personal experience with such dangers. Later in the play we learn that his wife was about Juliet's age when Juliet was born. Now Capulet says "The earth hath swallow'd all my hopes but she [Juliet] " 1. It's very likely this means that Capulet's girl-bride lost several other children. Capulet is in somewhat of a quandary. He wants his daughter to be happy, but he doesn't want to marry her off at such a young age, yet he doesn't want to turn away a perfectly eligible suitor.
He solves his problem for the time being by advising Paris to woo Juliet, and saying "My will to her consent is but a part" 1.
Later in the play he will drastically change his attitude about this. Capulet then invites Paris to an annual feast he has planned for that night. He tells Paris it will be a very big party, where he will see "Earth-treading stars that make dark heaven light" 1.
He means that the ladies will be so beautiful that they will shine like stars come down to earth. Capulet goes on to tell Paris he will feel the kind of delight that young men feel in April, when everything looks and smells wonderful.
In other words, Paris is invited to check out all the beautiful ladies, and when he does, he may find that Juliet is only one more. It could turn out that when she is among a group of ladies "stand in number" she won't count for much "in reckoning none".
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