Analysis Of Romeo And Juliet

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The play Romeo and Juliet, by William Shakespeare, is set in Verona, Italy, in the 1600s. The main characters are teenagers named Romeo Montague and Juliet Capulet who fall madly in love and end up making some not so great decisions. Their starstruck love ends up costing both of them their lives. Romeo and Juliet’s young love was immediate; therefore, it caused a lot of tragedy and heartache for not only them, but their families and loved ones. Romeo and Juliet met at a party where Romeo was to meet another girl, Rosaline, who he was, at the time anyway, madly in love with. The party was at the Capulet home and that’s where he met his new soon to be love of his life, Juliet Capulet. When Romeo went to the party, he saw Juliet and started …show more content…

The Montagues and Capulets were not friendly with each other, and they did not get along. That may have been part of the attraction for the young lovers, the fact that there love was forbidden but it sure did lead to a lot of heartache within both of their families. Juliet is clearly overwhelmed by emotion when, in one of the most famous quotes from the play, she says, “O Romeo, Romeo, wherefore art thou Romeo? Deny thy father and refuse thy name, Or, if thou wilt not, be but sworn my love, And I'll no longer be a Capulet” (2.2.36-39). Here Juliet is expressing her feelings for Romeo and wondering why she is in love with, of all people, a Montague, of which her father and family had so much hatred for. The feelings the Capulets had towards the Montagues were mutual. The feud may have fueled their passion. The the Association for Psychological Science article titled The Paradox of Temptation explains that “According to the so-called “scarcity principle,” we value things that are rare—gold, for example—and don’t much care for things that are common or readily available. This is the theory behind the folk wisdom that ‘forbidden fruit’ only sharpens desire.” The love that Romeo and Juliet had for each other was a ‘forbidden fruit’ situation. I suppose Romeo and Juliet could have really been in ‘true love’ but not even Friar Lawrence believed in the validity of their romance. He says, …show more content…

Sure, forbidden love seems exciting at first, especially to those with a teen brain, but the outcome for Romeo and Juliet was not a good one, ending not only their own lives, but the lives of some of their loved ones. Romeo and Juliet’s young love was immediate and caused a lot of tragedy and heartache for not only them, but their families and loved

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