Reconciliation. Montague promises to put up a statue of Juliet and Capulet promises to put one up of Romeo. The statues represent the end of the feud between the families.
Well, two statues actually. The Capulets build a statue of Romeo and the Montagues build a statue of Juliet.
The father of Romeo, when he and Juliet's father had a competition of who could make the best statue of the other's child.
The Nurse promises Juliet that she will go find Romeo and talk to him for her
They decide to make each other a statue of each others child like The Montagues made a statue of Juliet The Capulets made a statue of Romeo After Romeo and Juliet were both dead
But I can give thee more:For I will raise her statue in pure gold;That while Verona by that name is known,There shall no figure at such rate be setAs that of true and faithful Juliet.
Well, two statues actually. The Capulets build a statue of Romeo and the Montagues build a statue of Juliet.
Lord Capulet offered a golden statue of Romeo and Juliet to Lord Montague as a gesture of peace and reconciliation following the tragedy.
The father of Romeo, when he and Juliet's father had a competition of who could make the best statue of the other's child.
The Nurse promises Juliet that she will go find Romeo and talk to him for her
They decide to make each other a statue of each others child like The Montagues made a statue of Juliet The Capulets made a statue of Romeo After Romeo and Juliet were both dead
Capulet agrees to build a golden statue of Romeo and Montague agrees to do the same for Juliet.
But I can give thee more:For I will raise her statue in pure gold;That while Verona by that name is known,There shall no figure at such rate be setAs that of true and faithful Juliet.
Montague promises to build a gold statue of Juliet as a symbol of peace and reconciliation between their two feuding families in Verona.
The statue seen is not real it is a minature that the Special Effects Team added in post-production
day symbolizes hatred and fighting because all the fights happen during the day and Romeo and Juliet can't be together during day.
Capulet has no idea that Romeo had married Juliet or that he even intended to until after they both were dead. At that time he was of course unhappy that Juliet was dead, but felt that he would rather have her alive and married to Romeo, who he agrees to build a statue to.
In "Romeo and Juliet," flowers symbolize love, beauty, and youth, reflecting the innocence and purity of the young lovers. Swords, on the other hand, symbolize violence, conflict, and the feud between the Capulets and Montagues, representing the destructive forces that ultimately lead to tragedy in the play.