 Studying Remy and Juliet? Let's look at key quotes relating to the character of Juliet. We first meet Juliet in Act 1, Scene 3 when she's talking to her mother Lady Capulet. They have a very distant relationship and she also doesn't seem very interested in marriage. Lady Capulet says, Mary, that Mary is a very theme and the repetition of Mary here shows she expects Juliet to get married soon. Shakespeare uses Cesare twice here when Lady Capulet is addressing her daughter. She's trying to give the idea of marriage a lot of weight and to show Juliet how serious this is. But Juliet replies by saying, It is an honour that I dream not of. Shakespeare uses assonance of I in It, Is and I to create a sense of shock and also to show how defiant Juliet is. The abstract noun honour shows that Juliet is aware that marriage is supposed to be a massive badge of honour for women. But she goes against Elizabethan norms and she doesn't really seem to care about it. What she says, this phrase is written in Iambic pentameter. What this is meant to do is to show just how headstrong Juliet really is.