What follows is a chaotic, almost accidental murder. Romeo tries to intervene, physically blocking Mercutio, and Tybalt stabs Mercutio from under Romeo’s arm. As he dies, Mercutio delivers the play’s most famous curse: “A plague o’ both your houses!”
Mercutio, ever the jester with a cynical edge, baits the hot-headed Tybalt, who has arrived seeking Romeo. When Romeo refuses to fight—now secretly Tybalt’s kinsman by marriage—Mercutio is disgusted by what he sees as “vile submission.” He draws his sword. act 3 romeo and juliet
From this point forward, the play is a countdown to the tomb. Act 3 is where Shakespeare shows us that love, no matter how pure, cannot survive in a world ruled by hate, haste, and the failure of those who should know better. The plague falls on both houses—and we are left to watch it spread. What follows is a chaotic, almost accidental murder
Lady Capulet enters, misinterprets Juliet’s tears as grief for Tybalt, and announces the marriage to Paris. Juliet refuses. Capulet explodes in fury, calling her “baggage,” “green-sickness carrion,” and threatening to disown her if she disobeys. The Nurse, the one adult Juliet trusted, betrays her with pragmatic advice: marry Paris, since Romeo is banished and “a gentleman of noble parentage.” The plague falls on both houses—and we are