What Is The Loathing In Romeo And Juliet

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Shakespeare’s plays are swelling with scenes that remain ambiguous, that force a playwright to appropriate creative liberties. Naturally, I cannot help but sense a captivating tug toward Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. In order to communicate my imagination, only the squalid places of Manhattan are befitting of the loathing when Tybalt’s blade penetrates the mistaken coat. The scene of which I am quoting occurs when Romeo pulls Mercutio from his challenge unto Tybalt, then Tybalt stabs Mercutio as he is under Romeo’s shoulder. The scene is most compelling since it includes no lines; thus, I am allotted abundant territories for which my interpretation shall reveal to be both gorgeous and ghastly at the same instant. As for one interpretation,

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