Would Romeo and Juliet’s lives been less of a struggle if they never got married? Well hopefully by reading my essay the answer to my question will be explained and you will no longer be puzzled. The new folger edition of Romeo and Juliet written by Shakespeare explains to the reader that love can turn into a disaster. Throughout my essay I will be stressing many points such as 1) Romeo and Juliet’s forbidden love, 2) Juliet’s fate, 3) Juliet versus her parents, and 4) Romeo’s character portrayal.
Is Romeo and Juliet’s love forbidden between a Capulet and a Montague? Is this true or are you not sure? For example, Romeo first noticed Juliet at her party, and supposedly Juliet was there to find her mate. Some time later a friend informed Romeo that she was Juliet the Capulet’s daughter and he shouldn’t get involved with her. This didn’t stop Romeo and from that point on in his mind all that he focused on was Juliet and her elegance. When the party was over Romeo fled to her house and called for her. Romeo and Juliet had no clue of what chaos they would encounter but they were destined to fall in love. There are many tragedies in Romeo and Juliet but they are basically centered around Juliet.
Later on in the book, Juliet tries to think of ways to avoid her marriage to Paris.
Juliet’s parents want her to marry Paris. She loves her parents but can’t begin to explain the difficult situation she is in. Juliet is confused and goes to Friar Lawrence for help and he advises her to get a dagger and some poison and fake her death.
Romeo is a person who is always moving around. He’s unpredictable and his style is unique. Romeo is full of many surprises and you’re never certain of his next move. For example, in the beginning of the book he’s stunned, in a daze and heartbroken because of Rosaline but takes a look at Juliet and his heart revitalizes itself. When it comes to Juliet he is generous, sentimental and sensitive.
The play, Romeo and Juliet, written by William Shakespeare, is about a tragedy of two star crossed lovers who want nothing more than to be together forever. “…Or, if thou wilt not, be but sworn my love, And I’ll no longer be a Capulet.” (2.2.35-36) Romeo, a Montague, who is young and passionate, meets Juliet at a Capulet party. When they meet, it’s love at first sight. Juliet, a Capulet, is a beautiful young lady tired of being controlled by her father, Lord Capulet. The two families are in a never ending feud that comes between Romeo and Juliet’s love. In the course of four and a half days, Romeo and Juliet plan their marriage with the help of Priest Friar Laurence and Juliet’s Nurse. After the couple is married, Romeo is banished from the city of Verona, causing an issue for their ideal fate together. Lord Capulet forced Juliet to marry Count Paris after she married Romeo, leaving Friar to structure a plan to avoid a second marriage for Juliet. Juliet takes a sleeping potion that makes her believably dead for forty-two hours – during this time, Romeo was to be told that she is still alive; however he was not, so he purchased illegal poison so that he did not have to live without Juliet. Juliet wakes up only to find her true love lying dead next to her, thinking it necessary to stab herself with a dagger. After the couple dies, there leaves one question; Who should be pardoned, and who should be punished? The Nurse should be pardoned, while Friar Laurence and Count Paris should be punished.
In itself, the concept of marrying Paris rendered Juliet suicidal. Tybalt’s death, according to the thoughts of Capulet, left Juliet struck with grief. Therefore, he agreed to allow Paris to marry his daughter, in order to supposedly restore her cheer. Juliet’s and Friar Lawrence’s ingenious, yet lethal, intentions spawned after Juliet decided to be independent and not trust the principles of her own family. While her parents strived for her happiness, the words, “I will drag thee on a hurdle thither” (III.v.160), brought too much agony for her to manage, as she knew that her only choice was to marry Paris. Conclusively, Tybalt’s death was the foremost influence of Lord Capulet’s desire to marry Juliet to Paris, intending to bring joy to her. To the family’s dismay, they were unaware of the catastrophic events to come, because of
Through his motivation to find love, Romeo, a dynamic character, changes from a subdued individual, into a jovial lovesick character. In the early sections of the play, Romeo is in love with a woman named Rosaline who does not reciprocate those feelings. This leads him to drone on about, “sad hours “ (I.i.146) and how he would, “rather weep” (I.i.167) because he is, “out of her favour” (I.i.154). The importance of Romeo’s affection for each of his women is essential to address. The feelings that Romeo possesses inevitably leads him to become sorrowful over rejection but then, optimistic for Juliet. Later on in the play, once Romeo meets Juliet, he is quick to forget the love that he had for Rosaline and the grieving that he had underwent. After meeting her at Capulet’s ball Romeo states that she is, “my
Shortly after she discovers that Romeo is a Montague, and an enemy to her family, she becomes torn between her love for Romeo and her loyalty to her family. She says, “My only love sprung from my only hate, too early seen unknown and known too late”. When Juliet is informed by the nurse that her cousin, Tybalt has been killed by Romeo, she has an inner conflict, finding it difficult to believe that her love has killed her cousin, but feeling as if she must still support Romeo, for they are married. She ends up siding with Romeo, and refuses her father’s requests for her to marry Paris. Her father is angered, as she gives no apparent reason for not wanting to marry. She initially turns to her mother for help, and failing that, her Nurse. After they offer her no support, she turns to Friar Laurence, panicked. She desperately attempts to convince the Friar to help her, threatening to kill herself if he cannot give her a solution. Juliet’s constant thoughts on being torn between herself, her family, and Romeo lead to Act IV, Scene 3, in her bedchamber, struggling to decide whether to take the potion the Friar has given her. She is worried about many things, wondering if the potion will work at all, saying “What if this mixture do not work at all?”. She wonders if the potion is in fact poison, and the Friar secretly wants her dead “What if it be a poison, which the friar Subtly hath
When Romeo was exie,Juliet was forced to get married to Paris which he does not want to.That day Juliet came to Friar Lawrence asking him for help,and if he refuse to help her,
Juliet has never been in a relationship before, so this is a new experience for her. Lady Capulet, Capulet, the nurse, and others thought that she is being ridiculous. They think that she is stubborn and foolish for not wanting to marry Paris. Her father gets very upset when he hears Juliet will not and does not want to marry Paris as he expresses to her.
where every third line had to rhyme and the last two lines also had to
She agreed to marry her sworn enemy after only knowing him for less than a day, Act 2 scene 3 Nurse “Then hie you to Friar Lawrence’ cell; there stays a husband to make you a wife.” The Nurse knew that Romeo was a Montague and that Juliet’s mother and father would never agree to marriage but she told Juliet that she should marry anyways, just in secret. Juliet drank a potion that might have killed her and it made her family think she was dead just so she could not marry someone she didn’t want to. Act 4 scene 1 Juliet ”O, bid me leap, rather than marry Paris, from off the battlements of any tower…”, she lists many other ways to kill herself after this. When she wakes up from the potion to find Tybalt and Romeo dead she has two lines and then stabs herself with almost no thought process at
Mere hours after the masque, Juliet and Romeo are surreptitiously married under the supervision of Friar Lawrence, who hesitantly states, “Come, come with me, and we will make short work; / For, by your leaves, you shall not stay alone / Till Holy Church incorporate two in one” (2.6.35-37). Friar Lawrence agrees to marry Romeo and Juliet in hopes of ending the feud between their families. Though he has good intentions, the Friar creates far more problems than he solves in his action of marrying the two partners, mainly because he agrees to keep it a secret and deceive the rest of Verona. Soon after the star-crossed lovers’ wedding, Juliet’s father marries her to Paris because he is unaware of her situation. Because of Romeo and Juliet’s secret wedding, Juliet resolves to do anything in her power to avoid a decided marriage with Paris. She observes, “Things that, to hear them told, have made me tremble- / And I will do it without fear or doubt, / To live an unstain’d wife to my sweet love” (4.1.87-89). Juliet is willing to go to drastic measures to stay true to Romeo, which, while admirable, leads to future deception that
Romeo has an obsessive personality. The morning before he meets Juliet, he is obsessing on Rosaline. To see Rosaline, Romeo snuck into a Capulet’s party; once there, he meets Juliet and instantly he forgets his obsession of Rosaline, thinking Juliet is the most beautiful creature on earth. Friar Lawrence even acknowledges this when he states, “Young men’s love then lies / Not truly in their hearts but in their eyes” (II iii 67-68). Romeo’s affection is easily swayed from Rosaline to Juliet.
Romeo, son of Montague and Lady Montague, is introduced into the story as a depressed, upset young man, moping over a girl who will never love him back. As he says to Benvolio, “She’ll not be hit with Cupid’s arrow. She hath Dian’s wit, and, in strong proof of chastity well-armed, from Love’s weak childish bow she lives uncharmed” (Romeo and Juliet I i 203-206). Romeo states that his true love will not love him as he thinks of her, as she intends to stay chaste and turn into a nun, thus upsetting Romeo and putting him in a depressed state of mind. He is a very extreme person, and in a way, that contributes to the hastiness of the whole play, as Romeo is always at either of his two extremes; his mood either quite happy or relatively dismal. He shows that in his thoughts, as he is at first convinced he should never love another woman, but then he meets Juliet only days afterward and forgets about his previous love. His encounter with Juliet is hasty, but he claims he “never saw true beauty till this night” (Rom I v 52). Romeo reveals his personality, and how quickly he is able to get over someone whom he thought he was in love with. However, after encountering Juliet and falling in love once more, Romeo develops an obsession of sorts w...
There are many forces in the tragic play of Romeo and Juliet that are keeping the two young, passionate lovers apart, all emanating from one main reason. In this essay I will discuss these as well as how love, in the end, may have been the cause that led to the tragic deaths of Romeo and Juliet. Their strong attraction to each other, which some call fate, determines where their forbidden love will take them.
In addition to being a rich, nice, and suitable man, Paris was not a Montague. Lord Capulet was impressed with Paris and scheduled an abrupt wedding for the marriage of Paris and Juliet, without knowing of the secret matrimony of Romeo and Juliet. When Juliet heard news of her arranged marriage she soon fled to a trusted friend, Friar Lawrence, for a tactic to get out of the soon to be marriage. The Friar quickly brewed up a vial that had the capability to make one appear dead while they were still alive. In addition to making the vial the Friar also sent word to Romeo that in two days he need to return to Verona to be there when Juliet woke up from her sleep like coma. As fate would have it Romeo received word that Juliet had past on, but not that it was only a medically induced coma. Immediately after hearing the horrible news of his wife's death Romeo few back to the tomb of Juliet's body with a bottle of lethal poison. When he arrived Paris was at Juliet's tomb, nevertheless Paris blames Romeo for the death of Juliet's death. Meaning that Romeo broke her heart when he killed her cousin Tybalt. They were soon consumed in a fight, but in the end Romeo kills Paris. Romeo was consumed with grief and drinks poison that puts him to rest. Soon Juliet woke up to discover the dead bodies of Paris and Romeo, the sight of the bodies caused her to stab herself in the
Although the lovers are both fairly impudent throughout the play, Romeo, the male lead, is even more so. Through out the play of Romeo and Juliet, the Montague heir has ceased maturity over the course of the Shakespearean tragedy. First of all, it was “Rosaline” (II.iii.67). whom Romeo “didst love so dear” (II.iii.67). at the beginning of the play as he “groaned . . . woes for Rosaline” (II.ii.74-78) however, he easily fell out of lover with her and in love with the “fair daughter of the rich Capulet” (II.iii.58) like he was changing his mind on a meal he’d order. Also, he fell out of love with Rosaline because she did not “doth grace for grace and love for love allow.” (II.iii. 85-88) which basically meant that Romeo didn’t love Rosaline because she didn’t love him back, which is very childish in hindsight. Another way that Romeo is immature is that he doesn’t have a sense of reality fore, he’s always either extremely depressed, like when Rosaline wanted to remain chaised for life or extremely elated like when he met Juliet, while having no real middle ground for his emotions. These are all reasons why Romeo is immature: he’s always heads over heels in love for trivial reasons and he has no to little sense of reality.
Described as one of the greatest love stories of all time, Romeo and Juliet is also a very complicated one. There has been bad blood between the Montague and Capulet families for as long as their generations have lived. The hostility between the two families was so destructive that no human being and no God had the power to diminish it. The story tells us of a young Montague boy, Romeo, and a young Capulet girl, Juliet, who fall madly in love with each other at first sight. Their love for one another is so powerful and irresistible that it brings the feud between the families to an end.