Juliet speaks a few paradoxes at the very end of the scene. A paradox is a statement or situation that seems impossibly contradictory, and yet is nevertheless true. In order to find out what Romeo's name is, she sends her Nurse to ask him, saying, "If he be married, / My grave is like to be my wedding bed" (1.5.148-149). It seems like a contradiction to claim that the place where one is buried could double as one's wedding bed; however, Juliet means that if she learns that this young man is already taken, she will die before she ever gets married because he is the only one she would want to marry.
Then, right after Juliet learns from her Nurse that the name of the young man with whom she fell in love at first sight is Montague, she says, "My only love sprung from my only hate!" (1.5.153). It does not seem possible that the one thing a person loves could come form the one thing that person hates, and yet, because the reader knows about the feud between their families, it makes sense why Juliet would say this. She has fallen in love with Romeo, and yet he is a member of the family that her family hates, who she is likewise supposed to hate. It's really a terribly difficult position for her.
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