Respuesta :
Answer: Hope this helps.
Explanation:
In act 2, scene 2, Juliet asks Romeo to "pronounce it faithfully," meaning that he should declare his love to her sincerely, and not because he thinks she can be "quickly won." Indeed, Juliet is aware that Romeo is at an advantage here. He has overheard her saying how much she loves him. Juliet is worried that he might be saying that he loves her simply because he now knows that he can easily have her.
Romeo then says he will swear by the moon that he loves Juliet. Juliet isn't satisfied with this because, as she says, the moon is "inconstant." It changes and thus is an inappropriate symbol of his love, which she hopes will not likewise change and be "inconstant." Juliet then suggests that Romeo should "swear by (his) gracious self," but then changes her mind and says that any promise that might be made should not be made at that moment, because it would be "too rash . . . too sudden; / Too like the lightning."
Juliet then decides that Romeo can prove that his love is honorable by proposing to marry her. This would indeed be a permanent pledge, rather than a "rash" or "sudden" one. Romeo duly promises to call upon Juliet the next day, "at the hour of nine."
Later in the play, when Romeo is exiled for killing Paris, he is devastated and proclaims that "more honourable state . . . lives in carrion-flies" than in himself. One of the reasons he is so devastated, as implied by the above quotation, is that he thinks he will, by being away from Juliet, be breaking the pledge of honorable love that he made to her when he agreed to marry her and be with her forever. This indicates that Romeo was indeed acting honorably, and faithfully, when he pledged his love for Juliet.