How does Juliet handle the news that Romero has been exiled from Verona. Find the quote of it in the book

In the play Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare, Juliet's reaction to the news of Romeo's exile from Verona is depicted in Act 3, Scene 2. Here is the quote that captures her response:

"Nurse: Ah welladay! He's dead, he's dead, he’s dead!
Juliet: Can heaven be so envious?

Romeo banished? He climbed the bird's nest to sleep with the lark,
And then fled here again when it was still night,
After only one brief sweet moment of heavenly joy!

O serpent heart, wrapped in a flowering face!
Was ever a book containing so much wickedness
As your sweet face uncovered such vile action?
I would gladly follow you to saintly redemption, but
They who 'banished' you have taken you from me!

They have banished you from my sight,
And I, a thousand times in the morning, have cursed
The banishment that executed such a harsh sentence upon you.

O comfort me! ... Nurse, give me the light.
Here I am in the dark
Having no guide to find Romeo
And the Stygian gates wide open,
With a love like a dead fiancé sealed up in a tomb.
That sentence may take your Romeo way,
But no sentence can part my love from me." (III.ii.43-63)

This quote demonstrates Juliet's intense grief and despair upon hearing of Romeo's exile. She is shocked and overwhelmed by the news, cursing her fate and desperate to find a way to be with Romeo despite the obstacles in front of them.