How Does Romeo And Juliet Conform To Elizabethan Tragedy

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Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare doesn’t conform to Elizabethan tragedy because the way that Romeo and Juliet died and their characteristics. In Romeo and Juliet, the main characters are Romeo and Juliet and they both die because of an accident. They die because the note that was supposed to be delivered to Romeo telling him of the plan about Juliet’s fake death isn’t delivered because the messenger is quarantined. Also, the main characters don’t have a trait that outweighs their defects and have the reader care for their fate. Romeo and Juliet doesn’t conform to the genre Elizabethan tragedy because the death of Romeo and Juliet weren’t catastrophes, were because of accident, and the principal characters not having traits to outweigh …show more content…

The reason why Romeo kills himself is because he believes that Juliet is dead. In Act five Friar John says, “We both were in a house/ Where the infectious pestilence did reign/ Seal'd up the doors and would not let us forth”(V.ii.9-12) The messenger not being able to deliver the note because of being quarantined is what ended up killing Romeo. The note not being delivered was accidental because the messenger didn’t intend to not deliver the note to kill Romeo it was an accident that he couldn’t. Juliet says “Poison, I see, hath been his timeless end/… and left no friendly drop/To help me after”(V.iii.167-170). Juliet is saying that she is killing herself because Romeo is dead. This makes the note not being delivered responsible for both deaths.

The death of Romeo and Juliet doesn’t jibe to Elizabethan tragedy because the deaths aren’t a catastrophe and didn’t cause much suffering. The parents of Romeo and Juliet are more worried about what happened, than the actual death of their children. They react to the sight of them dead but quickly move on.”Seal up the mouth of outrage for a while/Till we can clear these ambiguities”(V.iii.231-235). That statement by the Prince exhibits their emotion towards their deaths.Also, Montague expeditiously moves on to raising the statue of Juliet. “But I can give thee more,/For I will raise her statue in pure gold”(V.iii.314-315). The suicides of Romeo and Juliet aren’t

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