From reading Romeo and Juliet, I developed the theme - love and hate are passionate emotions that can overtake logic/reason and cause people to act irrationally. In the play, hate between the Montagues and the Capulets led to the deaths of their kinsmen Mercutio and Tybalt. The despise between the two men solely rested on the fact that one was a Montague and the other a Capulet. This is illustrated by Tybalt in this line- ‘Peace? I hate the word as I hate hell and all Montagues.’” Tybalt doesn’t know every single Montague, yet his strong hate overshadows any logic and compels him to act with hate toward each and every Montague. The hate that he has for the Montague’s pushes him to act rashly and led him to combat Mercutio even though logically, their fight started for no real reason alone except that the two were in the streets at the same time. …show more content…
Romeo and Juliet had a passionate love for one another that, like hate, resulted in them ignoring logic.
Romeo asks the Friar to marry him and Juliet, which seems ridiculous because Romeo and Juliet had just met two days prior. Clearly, they did not have enough time to have gotten to know each other in a deeper way, but the love, although physical, between the two has overtaken their logic and they could not see the irrationality in their decision to marry. Not only did Romeo act without thought because of love, but Juliet also behaved in the same manner. When Juliet awoke after faking her death and found Romeo dead, she became distraught because she loved Romeo so passionately and could not imagine life without him. Her strong love for Romeo overtook logic and reason and she committed suicide. Her suicide was a very impulsive decision that she did not quite examine thoroughly. Her taking her own life seems rash and irrational knowing that their relationship thus far is extremely short. Both the love between Romeo and Juliet and the hate between the Montagues and the Capulet’s led to irrational
decisions. The visual artwork that I have created is a doll, whose one eye is covered by a heart and the other skull and bones, and who is walking into flames. The heart in one eye represents love and the skull and bones in the other eye represent hate. I got the idea to put these two symbols on the eyes because in fiction, when someone is possessed, it is visible through their eyes. By putting the heart and the skull and bones on the eyes, I tried to show that the person in my artwork is possessed in a way by love and hate. Being possessed by love and hate would impact logic because when one is possessed, their brain function is impaired. The doll walking into the fire represents acting irrationally because it is irrational for someone to walk into a fire. I tried to have the doll stand up to look as if he is walking, but I had to use the marker cap underneath the doll as support since the legs did not support the weight of the body. The cube behind the flames is only to prevent the flames from falling backwards and both the cube and the marker cap does not represent anything. Through my artwork, I am attempting to convey that love and hate can overtake logic and cause people to act irrationally.
Many people claim that love and hate are the same thing, while others say that the two emotions are complete opposites. William Shakespeare explored the two emotions in his play Romeo and Juliet. In the play, Romeo Montague and Juliet Capulet are teens who grew up in families that have been feuding longer than either family can remember. However, the two meet out of unforeseen circumstances, and fall irrevocably in “love”. They woo, and within twenty-four hours they are married. Things seem to be going well until Romeo is provoked into killing Juliet’s cousin, Tybalt, and gets himself banished. Juliet is also promised to marry Paris, an eligible bachelor, while she is still mourning Romeo’s banishment. She decides to see one of the two people who know of her and Romeo’s marriage, Friar Laurence, to whom she says that if she cannot find a way out of being alone she will kill herself. The Friar gives her a potion to sleep for forty-two hours and appear dead to help her. The plan is that Romeo is supposed to be there when she wakes up, but Romeo hears that she is dead and kills himself at her feet. She then awakes and kills herself as well, ending the whole brutal affair. The reader is then left to wonder if what they have just experienced is a tragedy of young love or a lesson on the power of hate, a question for which Shakespeare leaves a blurry but definite answer. After a deeper look into the text, it becomes clearly evident that hate has far more power over the characters than their “love” ever could.
Throughout Romeo and Juliet, love and hate are combined. However, even though they are combined, love still remains the principal theme in the play. Although in the play, the theme of hatred can be just as important and sometimes it intensifies the theme of love. For example, Romeo and Juliet’s love wouldn’t have been so extreme and powerful unless there was the hatred between the Montague’s and Capulet’s. We observe this from the very beginning of the prologue.
Ever heard that too much hate is a bad thing? Well in Romeo and Juliet, Shakespeare shows how the hate we have can lead to unintentional consequences. In Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare, Shakespeare illustrates how hate affects the way someone says or does something. From the very beginning of the story, Shakespeare tells us how much hate the two families have for each other. In the opening scene in Verona, the two servants of different families, the Montagues and Capulets, start a fight between each other.
This theme is not only represented in “Romeo and Juliet”, or other playwrights and stories that people read about online, but in their everyday life. Although Shakespeare makes the theme of love and hate dramatic and over the top in Romeo and Juliet, Shakespeare delivers the message of how love and hate can overpower and consume us, and if we aren’t careful, it can easily blow up and destroy everything. As Kurt Tucholsky once said, “Those who hate most fervently must have once loved deeply; those who want to deny the world must have once embraced what they now set on fire.” The coexistence of love and hate was not something Romeo and Juliet could choose to embrace or avoid, it was simply
Who would be willing to die for their loved ones? Romeo and Juliet would and did. Romeo and Juliet’s love and death brought two families together who could not even remember the origin of their hate. When the parents saw what their children's love for each other, they realized that their fighting had only led to suffering and insoluble conflict. Romeo and Juliet loved each other to an extent that they killed themselves rather than live apart. They did it with no hiatus. Juliet says before she kills herself, “O happy dagger, This is thy sheath. There rust and let me die.”( 5, 3, 182-183) demonstrating how she would rather die than not be with him.
Themes of Love and Hate in William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. Romeo and Juliet is a play about two young lovers, whose love was destined for destruction from the beginning because of hatred. between the two families, Montagues and Capulets. Therefore, Themes of love and hate are very important in the play as the plot is driven by these two themes. Shakespeare brings out the love between the two rivals through Romeo and Juliet and their relationships with the Friar and the Nurse.
In the play Romeo and Juliet by Shakespeare, the three characters who are to blame for the deaths of Romeo and Juliet are Friar Laurence, Lady Capulet, and Lord Capulet.
the party. Love and hate is the theme that I hope to deal with in this
In conclusion, the irony is that their love, and death, was able to do what their lives could not, to end the feuding between the Montague’s and the Capulet’s. It is with this thought that I shall examine “the thin line between love and hate” which is evidently shown on many occasions, such as when Romeo uses his love for Juliet to remove his hate for Tybalt “Tybalt, the reason that I have to love thee doth much excuse the appertaining rage” and also the play itself is evident of this, Romeo and Juliet’s love was so strong for each other, that they were able to overcome hate and also the hate that others possessed towards each other.
Romeo and Juliet is a tragedy. It tells the tale of two lovers from rival households and the tragic journey that leads to their destruction. The play shows all the events over the course of four days in Romeo and Juliet’s home town of Verona. Monday through Thursday is all we have to see of the Montague and Capulet families to acknowledge their hatred for each other. The play shows the struggle of Romeo and Juliet in their efforts to stop the hatred between their families and live happily ever after. But despite their efforts, they end up digging their own graves, showing how different actions have different consequences.
“O Romeo, Romeo, wherefore art thou Romeo? Deny thy father and refuse thy name;” (Shakespeare, 536). In the book, ‘Romeo and Juliet”, by William Shakespeare there is a deeper meaning that Shakespeare is trying to portray other than parents cannot control their children’s hearts. He is trying to portray that a name is only a name and it doesn’t matter in the grand scheme of things and that even with a different name that person will still be the same person they have always been. Shakespeare is using the characters: Juliet, Romeo, Lord Capulet, Friar Lawrence, and the Nurse to get this message across to the reader or the viewer.
Ultimately`, William Shakespeare shows in many different ways throughout the play, ‘Romeo and Juliet’, that love is the more powerful force than hate. The readers see how the characters continuously forgive one another, even when the conditions are tough. The friendships between specific characters display a loving bond that cannot be broken with hate. Shakespeare demonstrates that Romeo and Juliet’s love can overpower the hate of many events in the play. He shows that their love can even overpower the death of one of their own family members. Romeo and Juliet’s love brings friendship between their feuding families. This story is a true example of how love can conquer all.
For a love story, Romeo and Juliet has more violence and bloodshed than most TV mini-series. The play begins with a riot, ends with a double suicide, and in between has three murders. And all this takes place in the span of four short days. Of course, when you're dealing with love and passion, you're operating on an elemental level. The funny thing is that they have their roots in the same soil. It is common for love to turn to hate - in the blink of an eye.
In the first scene of Act one there is the servants Sampson and Gregory talking about sexual love. As they both talk about taking girls virginity. They both sound arrogant as they talk as if it is through experience. To them the thoughts of taking a girl’s virginity seems a joking matter.
The play Romeo and juliet, by William Shakespeare explores love and hate. Love can lead to unintended consequences for oneself and others. One of these being death. Many deaths have been introduced as unintended consequences because of forbidden love. There are many ways forbidden love creates death, This including tybalt's death and the two star-crossed lovers.