Dear Vixy: Have I got a site for you. (yours was nice.) I found a place where Romeo and Juliet is analzyed and explained for students. Turns out I was right about what Juliet's speech meant. So, here is URL to the site where you can learn more if you wish, with some pertinent parts of the analysis.

http://www.gradesaver.com/ClassicNotes/Titles/romeoandjuliet/act2.html



In the fifth scene the lover's share a sonnet which uses imagery of saints and
pilgrims. This relates to the fact that Romeo means Pilgrim in Italian. It is also
a sacriligeous sonnet, for Juliet becomes a saint to be kissed and Romeo a
holy traveler.

One of the remarkable aspects of the play is the transformation of both
Romeo and Juliet after they fall in love. Juliet first comes across as a young,
innocent girl who obeys her parents commands. However, by the last scene
she is devious and highly focused. Thus, she asks her nurse about three
separate men at the party, saving Romeo for last so as not to arouse
suspicion. Romeo will undergo a similar transformation in the second act,
resulting in Mercutio commenting that he has become sociable.

Romeo has meanwhile succeeded in hiding beneath Juliet's balcony. She
appears on her balcony and, in this famous scene, asks, "Oh Romeo, Romeo,
wherefore art thou Romeo?" (2.1.75). She wishes that Romeo's name did not
make him her enemy. Romeo, hiding below her, surprises her by interupting
and telling Juliet that he loves her.