Although the star-crossed lovers are referred to as light imagery, their meetings always take place at night. The reason being is that the most amorous activity takes place at night. Accordingly, towards the balcony scene, Juliet is pertaining to think about Romeo, which she can only meet up with at night. Juliet expresses her yearning desire to be with loverboy through a soliloquy laced with light imagery, “As Phaeton would whip you to the west, and bring cloudy night immediately” (III.ii.5). As Juliet is impatiently waiting for the end of day, she is hoping for a cloudy night. The indicated excerpt mentions that Juliet wants dusk to be even darker than night, so their meeting could be more covert. Nevertheless, the rising sun represents a threat to the couple in the means that their relationship will be more open. Accordingly, when Romeo hears that he is banished from Verona, he quickly meets with Juliet at nightfall, thereby saying goodbye and staying with her for the night, “Night candles are burnt out, and jocund day / Stands tiptoe on the misty mountaintops. / I must be gone and live, or stay and die. / More light and light, more dark and dark our woes” (III.v.9-11). The indicated excerpt mentions, Romeo sees the sun coming up, and day announces it’s arrival. Romeo notices that his cover for the night is gone, and tells Juliet the sad irony of his situation. At one point, Romeo alters his mind and tells Juliet that he does not want to leave and can stay there with her, but then overturns and says that if they found him, he would be dead. So while Romeo and Juliet view each other as light, in decree for their light to luster luminously it needs the disparity of murk, of night, to make it