Capulet should not have been as extreme with Juliet’s punishment for not obeying him because she is still young and Capulet, as her father, should understand that Juliet isn’t ready to marry Paris. Capulet was talking with Juliet after she refused the marriage when he pronounced that if she didn’t marry Paris, then he would disown her saying, “An you be not, hang, beg, starve, die in the streets, for, by my soul, I’ll ne'er acknowledge thee” (III.v.204-205). Rather than showing his power as a father by threatening to kick Juliet out, Capulet should have shown his fatherly ways by accepting the choices that his daughter had made. Supposing that instead of Capulet scolding Juliet for protesting the marriage between her and Paris, he calmly talked through the arrangement with her, there may have been more of a chance that she would have married Paris or that Capulet would have accepted her