They say in the eye of a hurricane all is calm, like a normal day. It might come after a fierce storm and be followed by one, but for a given moment everything is right. Much like in relationships, there is a sense of calmness where everything seems right, but it just so happens to be surrounded by chaos. Romeo and Juliet happen to be two people in love who experience their relationship as a hurricane. However, there are other forms of relationships in Romeo and Juliet that face the same experiences as the two lovers did. In Shakespear’s Romeo and Juliet, every relationship has highs and lows much like those in life. Romeo and Juliet is home to romantic relationships, mentor relationships, relationships of friends, parents, enemies, and relationships with authorities. In life, we have the same relationships, and with every relationship come hard times and easier times. Moments …show more content…
Romeo and Juliet express their love like no others. Shakespear demonstrates their love through the words he wrote. However, Shakespear does not shy away from the darkness. Romeo declares that message in the beginning by saying “Love is a smoke made with the fume of sighs; being purged, a fire sparking in lovers’ eyes; being vexed, a sea nourished with loving tears” (I.i.197). In today’s world that is the equivalent of Augustus Waters’ “I'm in love with you, and I know that love is just a shout into the void, and that oblivion is inevitable, and that we're all doomed and that there will come a day when all our labor has been returned to dust, and I know the sun will swallow the only earth we'll ever have, and I am in love with you.” Basically, Romeo is trying to say that there can be a love more passionate then all the rest and it has the possibility of crashing at some point, but it can also soar, so why not take the chance? Relationships have not changed from the 1500s to now, only how we chose to express them and the situations we are put
Aristotle proposed what is believed to be the first definition of a true tragedy. Specifically, he states that a tragedy triggers great pity and fear caused by the main characters’ actions alone. Likewise, a true tragedy lacks coincidence and fate plays little in the overall play. William Shakespeare writes the play of The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet in which the audience knows the destiny of these two tragic heroes from the very beginning. Although this play is tragic knowing that the lives of two lovers are lost, it is not a tragedy as Romeo and Juliet are not solely responsible for their own deaths. Destiny is determined through the hands of greater forces than that of Romeo and Juliet, making this play merely tragic and not a true
Romeo and Juliet is a play about two star-crossed lovers who have passionate and unconditional love for one another. Due to a family feud, the two lovers cannot be together, resulting in a great tragedy. Throughout the play, William Shakespeare uses figurative language to bring more depth and meaning to his dialogues. Due to the descriptive writing, readers are able to better understand and connect with the characters and the story. In Romeo’s famous love speech for Juliet, 2.2, Shakespeare uses many literary devices to show the audience that Romeo’s love for Juliet is true and everlasting. By using a metaphor, Shakespeare compares Juliet’s beauty to the sun to show the light Juliet brings
In this essay, I will be examining Shakespeare’s treatment of relationships in Romeo and Juliet. As a poet and playwright, he wrote 154 sonnets, 2 long narrative poems and 38 plays, one of his most famous plays being Romeo and Juliet. There are many different types of relationships between characters, and these are essential to the play. The prologue tells us that the play is about two star-crossed lovers from two feuding families, the Montagues and Capulets. There is hatred between these two families, this explains this, ‘Thou villain Capulet’. This quote suggests because of the hate between their families, the lovers are doomed from the start.
The relationship shown in Act 3 Scene 5 between Juliet and Lady Capulet is portrayed as poor. Lady Capulet is shown as a very distant mother, though this is to be expected when there is a Nurse taking care of the child from the early stages of the child’s life.
In William shakespeare’s play, Romeo and Juliet, we follow the tale of two lovers from enemy/warring families. They get married, only to have Romeo banished for revenging the death of his friend by killing Tybalt Juliet's cousin. The story ends with both Romeo and Juliet dead, which leads their warring families to peace. In this story, one of the recurring themes is about love; Shakespeare shares that being away from the ones you love can bring pain to all involved, and should be avoided.
1. In this Scene, the nurse is shown to have a really close bond with Juliet. She seems to have a better relation than her mother. The nurse lost her daughter “Susan”(1.3 Line 20) as she was the same “age”(1.1 Line 21) as Juliet, which makes the nurse closer to Juliet and treats her as a daughter.
Romeo and Juliet's love is a mix between passionate, obsessive and romantic love. “But soft, what light through yonder window breaks?It is the east, and Juliet is the sun. Arise, fair sun, and kill the envious moon, Who is already sick and pale with grief, That thou her maid art far more fair than she. Be not her maid, since she is envious. Her vestal livery is but sick and green
Lady Capulet tells Capulet he'd better have a crutch instead of a sword, and Lady
Though some may simply know romantic love as an intense bond between individuals devoted to one another, its effects in reality are not always as beautiful as the concept. Particularly when it is frowned upon by society and the people involved also swim against the current, the consequences of this type of love can be damaging to others outside the romance. In William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, the actions of the young lovers in their desire to be together not only steer the course of their lives, but also those of their friends, families, and other citizens in the city. The unfortunate series of events following Romeo and Juliet’s choice to reach beyond traditional gender roles, a standard courtship, and their established social networks reveal the importance of complying with these norms. By highlighting the chaos in Verona on the path to Romeo and Juliet’s eventual demise, Shakespeare suggests that intense romantic love that threatens relationships and expectations in the established social order leads to tragedy.
Romeo and Juliet had a doomed love from first laying their eyes on each other. Beginning with two families with a history of war, Romeo and Juliet knew their love for one another was forbidden but, they dare do it anyway. With Shakespeare’s focus on their love, it soon turns into a story of tragedy between two teens who fell madly in love despite being each other's enemy. The play takes a turn as Romeo and Juliet take their own life because their love becomes too strong that they can not bear to live without each other. Shakespeare illustrates this theme with the actions of both characters as they sneak behind their
In the tragic love story Romeo and Juliet, William Shakespeare shows how although the power of love can bring positive experiences, it can also bring destruction and drastic changes to the lives of all involved. He illustrates this idea through numerous poetic devices: creative metaphors, meaningful puns, and character-related contrast. Romeo and Juliets’ love was rushed, impulsive, and created sorrow for both parties involved.
In Romeo and Juliet, love is expressed in multiple ways, each showing different views and thoughts on love. It is expressed poetically with the belief that love can defeat all or shown with distaste for it and its impacts and more. In Romeo and Juliet, love is expressed poetically, by those in love, as something that has no bounds and possesses them. In Act 2 Scene 2, Romeo says to Juliet in the famous balcony scene, as a response to danger, ‘stony limits cannot hold love out’.
In “The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet,” Shakespeare’s hyperbole and dialogue reveals a focus on two star-crossed lovers that will risk anything for each other. In doing so, Shakespeare demonstrates the dangers of love. Juliet, worried about the safety of Romeo, asks him how he got in the Capulet property and says, “The orchard walls are high and hard to climb/ And the place death, considering who thou art/ if any of kinsmen find thee here” (Shakespeare 2.2.1-4). Romeo risked his life sneaking into the orchards, but to him, it was worth it to have the chance to speak to Juliet. Romeo’s feelings of love for Juliet made him lose sight of the real world and the danger of trespassing in his family’s rival’s home. This characterizes Romeo as reckless
The concept of being in love, over takes his will power, his social class, and the expectations that society may have imposed on him. “Is love a tender thing? Is it too rough, too rude, too boisterous, and it pricks like thorn.” For Romeo, love is tender, passionate, too boisterous, and at the end it pricks like thorn. On the other hand, Paris views love as a mere social exchange and tradition.
“Love is a smoke made with the fume of sighs.” (R&J 1.1.181) The tragedy of Romeo and Juliet has shown the readers the bitterness along with the passionate love. The messages which Shakespeare tried to bring to the readers made the play be a timeless classic for tragedy. It gives people similar but slightly unlike understandings from the particular point of views. The different movie versions and paintings take inspiration from the original play, but at the same time, they have their own interpretation to emphasize. From the last scene of the play as a whole, they all want to tell people that the impatience and rush will bring illusion on what people really feel, that urgency and lack of communication may make the people who are involved get hurt. More sadly, the most innocent person always gets hurt the most.