Romeo And Juliet Allusions

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Virtue itself turns vice, being misapplied,/ And vice sometime by action dignified.” (II. iii. 21-22.) The human condition follows the path of fate. Everyone makes choices out of their own free will which affects their life at that time, but will ultimately lead to their predetermined destiny. People inflict their own wounds during their life by the choices that they make. Some people may not believe that fate is something that truthfully exists in the world. They trust that whatever occurs in their lives comes as a result of the decisions that they make with their own free will. Others, however, believe that whatever happens during the course of their lives is inevitable and that every event is predestined and laid out before them like a …show more content…

“O Fortune, Fortune! All men call thee fickle./ If thou art fickle, what dost thou with him/ That is renowned for faith? Be fickle, Fortune./ For then I hope thou wilt not keep him long,/ But send him back.” (III. v. 59-63) Juliet feels helpless when she says goodbye to her new husband, Romeo, after the couple 's one and only night together. Fortune (or Dame Fortuna, goddess of fortune and fate) is often portrayed as a "fickle" (unpredictable and unreliable) goddess because she could raise men up to great heights or cast them down at any moment with the spin of her wheel. Juliet begs "fortune" to be kind to Romeo and reasons that since Romeo is so "faith[ful],” then "fickle" fortune should want nothing to do with him. Immediately after he kills Tybalt in a duel, Romeo declares he is "fortune 's fool." (III. i. 98) The phrase seems to be Shakespeare 's invention, although it has proverbial kin: "Fortune favors fools"; "God sends fortune to fools"; and "Fools have fortune," all of which date from the mid-sixteenth century. In Shakespeare 's hands, however, the sentiment of all these proverbs is inverted. Fortune is not bestowed on fools; men are the slaves Fortune makes fools of. Romeo, for example, simply by defending himself against Tybalt, a Capulet and therefore a blood enemy, becomes an outlaw. Caught up in a design he is powerless …show more content…

Fate is responsible because of Shakespeare’s incorporation of allusions and foreshadowing, language, and the characters’ actions. Some people may indict a single character for the crime, such as Friar Laurence. Friar Laurence could have been held accountable because of the blunders in his plan for Juliet to fake her death. This plan was foolish, forcing a young child to drink a potion of an uncertain substance. “...And, if thou darest, I’ll give thee remedy.” (Document C) Friar Laurence was oblivious to the effects of his actions, resulting in a tragic occurrence. What others may not realize is that this event was foreordained to happen because of Fate. It was by simple chance that Juliet came to Frair for assistance in the first place. Therefore, Fate controlled all of the characters’ actions throughout the story and there would not have been atrocious affairs without the destiny for them to appear in the

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