romeo and juliet by william shakespeare before, during, and after reading skills act iv
TRANSCRIPT
Romeo and Julietby William Shakespeare
Before, During, and After Reading Skills
Act IV
Literary ResponseRomeo and Juliet Act IV
Read the play carefully and note the choices and
decisions the characters make and how those choices and decisions impact the characters, events, and
conflicts.
Which character do you think is in the most danger at the end of this Act?
Explain the situation, why it is dangerous, and how you would have
handled the events and conflicts differently.
Explain your thoughts and ideas and use evidence
from the text to support your response.
Literary ResponseRomeo and Juliet Act IV
Read the play carefully and note the way the
characters interact with each other and the reasons behind their actions.
Which character made the most serious mistakes in Act IV?Explain what they did, what
happened to them, and how the mistakes impacted other characters
in the play.
Explain your thoughts and ideas and use evidence from the text to support your response.
Before Reading Skills
Preview and Predictions
• Examine the text features located throughout Act IV.
• Make a list of the things you “know” or “think you know” based only on the text features.
• Make a list of at least 3 things you want to know, but you need to read in order to find out.
• What major events do you predict will happen in Act III? What information supports your predictions?
During Reading Skills
Structure and Purpose of a Drama
• The purpose of a drama is to entertain the audience and to present information/details about the characters.
• The audience will learn about the characters in several ways. Pay attention to the characters and try to keep them organized as you read.
• You will be asked to create a character chart to identify the characters and their character traits.
How do we learn about a character during a play?
•What the characters say
•What the characters do
•What other characters say about them
•How other characters treat them
Act IV Scene 1909-914
Active Reading
• Read the entire scene carefully.
• Pay attention to all sidebar information especially the questions.
• Answer the Literary and Reading Focus questions found on the bottoms of the page.
• Complete the annotation guide as you read each page.
• Visualize how Shakespeare has the story unfold.
Act IV Scene 1909
Sidebar Questions
15. According to Paris, why is Capulet pushing his daughter to marry so quickly?
???
Lord Capulet thinks that marriage will help Juliet get over her grief for Tybalt.
Act IV Scene 1910
Connections
• Juliet tries to ward off Paris while “keeping up appearances” in this part of the scene.
• How is her behavior similar to or different from how girls in high school behave today?
???
Act IV Scene 1911
Sidebar Questions
54. What is Juliet holding in her hand?
What is she threatening to do?
???
62. The friar has to put up with a good deal of brandishing of knives and daggers from Romeo and Juliet. Now that the nurse is no longer Juliet’s ally, the friar has to be the confidant of both Juliet and Romeo. He must listen with patience to their threats of suicide if they can’t be together. What line in Juliet’s speech indicates that she has paused and that the friar for a time is silent?
???
Act IV Scene 1911
Sidebar Questions
77. Staging the Play
What would Juliet’s mood be as she delivers this speech?
What is she willing to do rather than marry Paris?
???
Juliet is distressed and desperate.
Rather Paris she would engage in a number of dangerous and potentially fatal activities.
LIST THEM!!!
Act IV Scene 1913
Sidebar Questions
89. Juliet must pay strict attention to the friar’s plan, as must the audience. On what day does the friar tell Juliet to take the potion?
???
Juliet is to drink the potion
on Wednesday night.
Act IV Scene 1913
Sidebar Questions
B. Reading Focus – Analyzing Cause and Effect
*Where have we seen the friar taking care of his herbs and heard him talk of magical potions
before?
*What will happen to Juliet when she takes the drug?
*What complications do you think might occur as a result?
Act IV Scene 1914
Sidebar Questions
117.
How is Romeo to be told of this plan?
When is he to watch Juliet wake and take her to Mantua?
???
The friar will send Romeo letters detailing his and Juliet’s intentions.
The two men shall watch Juliet wake from her coma, and that very night the two
lovers will flee to Mantua
Act IV Scene 1914
Sidebar Questions
126. Staging the Play
In some productions the friar holds Juliet back for just a moment and silently blesses her.
Why would this action make us more anxious about what might happen to her?
???
If the friar blesses Juliet, it shows that he has misgivings about the plan’s success and feels the need to bless her in an attempt to ward off
bad luck.
This doubt would make the audience and Juliet anxious.
Act IV Scene 1
914
Characterization
The friar has played a significant role in
the events of this play.
What has he done and said?
Do you view his actions as positive or negative?
What would be your advice to Juliet?
Romeo?
Friar Laurence?
Act IV Scene 1
*THE PLAN*
Plot – Following a Sequence of Events
Make a numbered list of the exact directions/steps Juliet is to follow based on Friar Laurence’s plan.
Make a numbered list of the exact directions/steps Romeo is to follow based on Friar Laurence’s plan.
Make a numbered list of the exact directions/steps Friar Laurence is to follow based on his plan.
Identify what could go wrong with any and all of the steps you have listed for each of the characters.
Which character do you think has the most significant role to play in the Friar’s plan?
Act IV Scene 4919-921
Sidebar Questions
1. How does this peaceful domestic scene contrast with what has just happened?
???
The Capulets and their servants are making jokes and busily preparing for the
wedding; meanwhile, Juliet lies in her room in a deathlike state, having risked
her life to avoid what her family celebrates.
Act IV Scene 4919-921
Sidebar Questions
12. What is Lady Capulet’s tone here?
???
Lady Capulet is teasingly affectionate here, poking fun of her husband’s past
womanizing.
Act IV Scene 4919-921
Sidebar Questions
23. The music is the bridal music, for the wedding. What irony would the audience sense on hearing this music and knowing what has happened to Juliet?
???
The audience knows that Juliet will not be Paris’s bride and that the wedding music
will give way to a funeral dirge.
Act IV Scene 4919-921
Reading Focus Question
A. Analyzing Cause and Effect – Why do you think Capulet is so happy to see his daughter marry Paris? What effect will the marriage have on his family and the feud between the Capulets and Montagues?
???Lord Capulet is happy to have Juliet marry Paris because it increases the family’s social standing in
Verona.
In addition, the marriage may help the Capulets gain an ally in the feud.
Act IV Scene 5Pages 922-927
Read the scene and all information and questions carefully.
* Summarize the major events on each page.
* Identify 2-4 significant lines on each page using the line numbers only. State the importance and/or meaning of the lines.
* Select the mood, tone, or character trait that is revealed through the lines.
Most Significant Lines
Select a total of four lines from Act IV that you thought were important, interesting, funny, or odd.
Copy the lines, page(s), and character(s) involved.
Translate any words or phrases that need to be clarified.
Explain the meaning of the lines and what was happening in the play as the lines were being spoken.
The Language of ShakespeareHow is the language of Shakespeare’s
Romeo and Juliet different from the language we use?
Identify the differences.
Translate Shakespeare’s words into modern language.
Explain the meaning of important lines from Romeo and Juliet.
Storyboard
A storyboard is a series of small illustrations to tell a story.
You will be creating a 9-box storyboard to summarize the most important events
from Act IV.
Be sure to select the 9 scenes carefully and make your illustrations accurate and clear (use labels if necessary).
On the back of the storyboard write a 9 sentence summary of Act IV.
Staging the Scene
An important part of reading drama is the ability to visualize the scenes.
As you read the scenes in Romeo and Juliet, try to imagine how the scene
could be created on a stage to convey the setting to the audience.
Select a scene from Act IV that you could “stage” for a production of
Romeo and Juliet.
Illustrate how you would create the scene on a stage.
Be creative!!!
Index Card
Quiz Tomorrow on Act IV!!!
You may use ONE 3x5 index card during the quiz.
No other materials will be available to you during the
quiz.
Everything on the card must be handwritten – no typed
information.
• Which predictions were accurate?
• Which ones need to be changed/revised?
• Which questions did we find the answers to while reading?
• Which questions do we still not know the answer to yet?
• Do we need to any any new questions to look for as we read?
Predictions and Purpose Setting