Transformation of Juliet in Shakespeare's The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet

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In William Shakespeare's The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet, love transforms Juliet. Early in the play, Juliet is a young girl who is very faithful to her family. After this young girl meets Romeo Montague, she begins to change. By the end of the play, Juliet is changed into a woman who is now very faithful to her husband, instead of her family.

In the beginning of the play The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet when Juliet is first introduced, she is introduced as a young girl who is very faithful to her family, the Capulet family. In being faithful to her family, she is very compliant to the elders in her family. When the Capulet family's nurse calls Juliet, Juliet comes promptly. Then, she politely asks why she was called. Juliet also calls her mother, Lady Capulet, "madam" (1.3.5). Juliet is also compliant to her family when she is at the feast that her family throws. Not long after Juliet meets Romeo, her mother calls her. When she hears this, she immediately ends her conversation with Romeo to go and see why her mother called her. In addition to being very compliant to her family, she is also very compliant when she is asked to do anything. When Juliet's mother, Lady Capulet, asks her daughter Juliet about her opinions on marriage, Juliet is very respectful with her answer. She says, "It is and honor that I dream not of." (1.3.66). Juliet is very compliant when her mother, Lady Capulet, is discussing Paris's proposal with Juliet. Lady Capulet is pleased with the proposal by Paris and wants Juliet to consider it. Even though Juliet is not interested in marrying Paris, or anyone else, she agrees to consider the idea because that is what her mother, Lady Capulet, wants her to do. Juliet is faithful to her fa...

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...bout taking the potion, she still took it because she loved her husband and wanted to be with him. Juliet is also willing to kill herself to be with her husband. After she wakes up from the potion and finds Romeo dead, she immediately takes a dagger and kills herself so that she can be with Romeo, even in death.

In William Shakespeare's The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet, Juliet is transformed by the love of Romeo. In the beginning of the play, she is a young girl who is very faithful to her family, the Capulet family. Once she meets Romeo, that all changes. She becomes a woman who is now extremely loyal to the man she loves, her husband Romeo.

Work Cited

Shakespeare, William. The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet. Elements of Literature Third Course. Ed. Kathleen Daniel et. al. Austin: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 2000. 735-851.

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