 Studying Romeo and Juliet. Here's how you can analyse that five scene three. The scene opens with Paris and his page coming to Juliet's graveyard. Here he speaks in alliteration and caesura to ask his page to stand watch whilst he enters Juliet's tomb. The page agrees but these stage directions show that he's talking to us directly as the audience showing that he's afraid to stand and watch as he has a bad feeling and the assonance here illustrates that he's scared in case an intruder comes. Just as he feared, the stage directions illustrates that the page whistles because he's intruders. These intruders are Romeo and Balthazar his confidant. Romeo speaks to his confidant Balthazar. He gives him a letter to deliver to his father. He speaks an imperative sentence basically stating that he has a suicide letter which he wants to be given to his dad as reasons for his own death. Romeo wants Balthazar gone and although Balthazar promises to leave, these stage directions we're speaking to us directly as the audience as well as his use of alliteration here shows that he still hides himself and keeps on watch to see what Romeo will do. The stage directions reveal that Romeo forces open the tomb and Paris to his shock when he sees Romeo realises that he's come to desecrate and to disrespect Juliet's tomb. Here he speaks in alliteration as well as Ayambic pentameter to basically state that he needs to protect Juliet's honor. Paris asks Romeo this rhetorical question because he believes that Romeo has simply come back to Juliet's grave in order to disrespect her memory. He thinks that he sees Juliet as an enemy. Romeo is seized with desperate emotions and he speaks in this imperative sentence telling Paris to back off and leave him alone. He then reveals to Paris that he has plans to kill himself in this tomb. Paris refuses to listen to Romeo and these stage directions show that he challenges him to a duel and Romeo kills him. Once Romeo has killed Paris and laid his body next to Juliet's body he speaks using this metaphor to say as he approaches her face that she still looks beautiful. She doesn't look like she's dead she looks as if she's still alive even if her eyes are closed. He asks this rhetorical question basically saying that Juliet looks so beautiful even if she's supposedly dead. This is ironic because she actually isn't dead she's still asleep however Romeo doesn't realize this. The stage directions show that Romeo drinks the poison and he speaks a 9-bit pentameter as he dies. He gives Juliet a final kiss. Fry Lawrence arrives and finds Romeo and Paris's dead bodies. He speaks in this exclamatory sentence as well as this rhetorical questions to show that he's horrified at what he's seen. Once Juliet wakes up and realizes what's happened she refuses to leave. She speaks in this exclamatory sentence and these stage directions show that she's so overcome by grief she takes Romeo's dagger and kills herself. The alarm is raised by Paris and Balthazar and Fry Lawrence's court. He then confesses everything and he uses these oxymorons to tell the houses of Montagues and Capulets what's really happened to their children. The Prince tells both families that they cause these deaths and they end up forgiving each other.