Tybalt's Vile Consequences

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As Tybalt states when he notices Benvolio out in the streets of Verona “Turn thee, Benvolio; look upon thy death” (Shakespeare 1.1.60). In one of Shakespeare’s finest plays, by the name of Romeo and Juliet, Tybalt threatens to kill his foe because of his last name. The play takes place in a very nice town by the name of Verona, Italy. Shakespeare created this play during the Renaissance period, and set the bar for how plays should run and function. This play consists of two star-crossed lovers that cannot express their love for each other due to an ongoing feud between their families. The protagonists in the play consist of Romeo and Juliet, with the antagonist being Tybalt who prevents the lovers from being together. The theme presented in this play, and what Shakespeare wants to get across to his audience is, …show more content…

Tybalt launched Romeo and Juliet’s love for each other into a downward spiral through his fiery attitude and his hatred for his enemy. First off, the fiery attitude of Tybalt made it so that Romeo and Juliet could not live on together. One example of this occurs in the beginning of the story when Benvolio attempts to quench brawls between servants from the Capulet and Montague families; just as Benvolio tells them to stop, Tybalt enters and says as stated “What, art thou drawn among these heartless hinds? Turn thee, Benvolio; look upon thy death” (Shakespeare 1.1.62). Romeo and Juliet’s love for each other could have excelled to extreme heights, if Tybalt never kept the fight going between the servants and Benvolio. His attitude kept the fight up and made it so the Prince created a law about being executed if you kill someone in the streets. Later on, this law

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