 Studying Romeo and Juliet, here's how you can analyse Act 2, scene 6. Friar Lawrence and Romeo enter and Friar Lawrence says this, in other words he's using personification to say that God and the heavens are happy that Romeo and Juliet are getting married. Romeo then responds in hyperbole hair and he's basically saying that once Friar Lawrence marries both he and Juliet, he'll even be happy if he dies after he knows that he's married Juliet. Yet Friar Lawrence thinks this type of passion is destructive and the repetition of violent hair shows that he's warning Romeo to be really careful not to love too passionately otherwise it can meet a violent death. Juliet then enters and she uses religious language to show that she's happy to see them. Romeo is so relieved to see Juliet and he speaks in Caesarea hair to show that he's incredibly happy to be marrying her. Juliet then responds using hyperbole hair to show that her love for Romeo is so vast she can't even sum it up. Friar Lawrence then starts the marriage ceremony and he speaks here in religious language to show us that they're going to get officially married.