Romeo + Juliet Essays

  • Romeo and Juliet

    945 Words  | 2 Pages

    The classic love story of Romeo and Juliet is a play by William Shakespeare that will never be forgotten. This is a story about two “star-crossed lovers” who come from two families that are rivals, which challenges their relationship and they die as a sacrifice for each other and their families. Many people have produced traditional and nontraditional versions of Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet play. These versions have enhanced the play in a way that the feud between the families is more intense

  • Romeo and Juliet

    1174 Words  | 3 Pages

    The tragedy Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare validates the struggle behind Romeo and Juliet's love. Through dialogue and plot Shakespeare addresses the birth of love with the families’ violence that threatens to taint love’s existence. The contradicting terms violence and love contrasts the blooming emotions from Romeo and Juliet and the families’ feud. Their death becomes an oxymoron as their feelings turn to happiness instead of sorrow. Shakespeare’s use of oxymoron contrasts the Montague-Capulet

  • Romeo and Juliet

    646 Words  | 2 Pages

    In Romeo and Juliet, Juliet is one of the main characters. I have learned that she is quite rash and bold and that she falls in love quickly. Juliet doesn’t really change throughout the play.I would not consider doing what Juliet does in the friar’s plan .The friar’s plan for Juliet had a chance to work in the beginning, but due to the unfortunate circumstances it doesn’t work out. Throughout the play of Romeo and Juliet, I have learned several things about Juliet. During the play she is quite rash

  • Romeo and Juliet

    665 Words  | 2 Pages

    The theme of love is highlighted effectively in Romeo and Juliet. At the play's beginning, Romeo describes his infatuation for Rosaline. His feelings are not returned and this means that he feels desolate: he shuts himself away from his friends and family. Shakespeare allows his audience to see that unrequited love can be painful. However when Romeo meets Juliet, all thoughts of Rosaline disappear. Romeo and Juliet's attraction for each other is immediate. The love they feel is passionate and based

  • Romeo and Juliet

    801 Words  | 2 Pages

    road to hell is paved with good intentions.” In the classic play Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare, this proverb reflects Friar Lawrence’s preeminent role in the tragedy of the two teenage lovers, each belonging to feuding families in Verona. Though Friar Lawrence’s motives are filled with good intentions, he does not always use the moral approach to reach them. In his play, Friar Lawrence is the most responsible character for Romeo and Juliet’s deaths because he is not only political, but also

  • Romeo and Juliet

    846 Words  | 2 Pages

    Throughout the play The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet, by William Shakespeare, Juliet Capulet views on love and marriage dramatically changes. In the beginning of the play Juliet has mixed feelings about love and marriage, but once meeting her “Star-crossed lover”, she changes the way that she feels. In the end, Juliet tragically kills herself once she realizes that Romeo killed himself. Shakespeare provides evidence for this change through Juliet's use of language, imagery, and dramatic irony in

  • Romeo and Juliet

    958 Words  | 2 Pages

    The tragedy of Romeo and Juliet, by William Shakespeare, is about two star crossed lovers dreadful fate. Each act of Romeo and Juliet is carefully crafted to provide the audience or reader with dramatic tension, mainly by foreshadowing and creating a suspenseful sensation. In the play, the theme -- some things aren’t meant to be -- has a major role in the development of the plot, and is represented in each act with foreshadowing. Shakespeare does this by making symbolic references, displaying

  • Romeo And Juliet

    1022 Words  | 3 Pages

    Romeo and Juliet A character goes through many changes that depend on the kind of events they experience. The play “Romeo and Juliet” written by William Shakespeare, uses different tones and language that shows the readers that Juliet, a Protagonist, changes over time, proving the idea that she is a dynamic character. At the beginning of the play, we are introduced to a young, innocent and inexperienced girl, Juliet the daughter of Lord Capulet . She has not yet seen the real world and is raised

  • Romeo and Juliet

    802 Words  | 2 Pages

    Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet used the literary device of foreshadowing to advance the tragic story of two teenage lovers. Foreshadowing was a warning or indication of an event that came later in the story. Shakespeare used many examples of foreshadowing to show an indication of the death or grave future of somebody. Shakespeare uses a few motifs, or reoccurring events, to tell the future. In Romeo and Juliet Shakespeare references light and dark to show the love of the couple and the consequences

  • Romeo & Juliet

    1340 Words  | 3 Pages

    Romeo and Juliet is a play about two teenagers who fall in love and break through the conflict of two families, the Montague’s and the Capulet’s. The balcony scene is essential in developing the contrast of these two young lovers, who express their love for one another. It tells us more about the characters and their personalities, and what they are willing to do for each other. The two films by Franco Zefferelli (1968) and Baz Luhrmann (1996) of Romeo and Juliet, Shakespeare’s famous play, have

  • Romeo and Juliet

    655 Words  | 2 Pages

    suppose to hate someone always gets stabbed in the back. Tybalt, Romeo, and Juliet have created a triangle full of love and hatred among the Capulet and Montague family, that later creates a deadly resolution in William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. Shakespeare has created multidimensional characters that have both strengths and weaknesses. Romeo son of Lord and Lady Montague is impulsive and romantic when the subject is love. Young Romeo loves the fact of being “in love” with anyone. After Romeo’s

  • Romeo and Juliet

    845 Words  | 2 Pages

    reincarnates itself through Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. The question that arises in this tragic love story of young, supposedly star-crossed lovers is who is to be truly blamed for their deaths within the first two acts? With a story as complex as this one, the blame can fall on various characters. However, the most evident characters to take the fall are Benvolio, Romeo and Friar Lawrence. To begin, Benvolio who is a part of the Montague family and the cousin of Romeo played a huge role in the tragic

  • Romeo and Juliet

    877 Words  | 2 Pages

    Romeo and Juliet is a play written in the 16th century by William Shakespeare. It is the story of a pair of star-crossed lovers, Romeo and Juliet set in the city of Verona. In actuality, it is a story of choices. Romeo and Juliet were to blame for their death as it was their choices that had rendered them dead. This essay will look at the factors that had caused their death such as Romeo’s hastiness, their fast moving relationship and secretive behavior. Romeo’s hastiness had ultimately caused his

  • Romeo and Juliet

    717 Words  | 2 Pages

    situation. In William Shakespeare’s play Romeo and Juliet, the lovers undertake an experience that plays with their fragile emotions. It challenges them to try and deal with the conflict standing in their way keeping them from something they want. Juliet, a composed young girl falls for love rapidly which makes her actions irrational. Love can cause an individual to make quick and irrational decisions followed by strong actions. The introduction to Juliet in the play shows an innocent and illogical

  • Romeo and Juliet

    561 Words  | 2 Pages

    bad moments. This is prominent in Shakespeare’s The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet. In The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet Shakespeare conveys his message, love contains both good and bad, by using figurative language and other literary elements. A few examples include metaphor, personification, and paradox. Romeo and Juliet’s affection for each other is pure as well as bad. Shakespeare uses metaphor to hint at his theme. “For here lies Juliet, and her beauty makes/ This vault a feasting presence of light”

  • Romeo and Juliet

    647 Words  | 2 Pages

    Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet has been a great example of “true love” in the past. But a question arises: Was this story really a story of true love or just true lust? The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet is the story of Romeo and Juliet, both from enemy families who are so madly in love with each other, they end up killing themselves. In the play, we can see so much physical contact and talks of love between Romeo and Juliet the moment they meet. Because of this, people think what Romeo and Juliet felt for

  • romeo and juliet

    856 Words  | 2 Pages

    In The Tragedy Romeo and Juliet, by William Shakespeare, Romeo demonstrates impetuous qualities that lead to his eventual suicide. Romeo is infatuated with Rosaline and becomes deeply depressed with her decision to become a nun. Romeo vacillates emotionally from Rosaline to Juliet, the daughter of a feuding family. Romeo’s impulsiveness is best exhibited through his unrequited love for Rosaline which leaves him predisposed to easily fall in love with Juliet. Hours after their introduction they fall

  • Romeo and Juliet

    1172 Words  | 3 Pages

    Love is often perceived as something perfect and flawless in today’s society. However, Romeo and Juliet, a play written by William Shakespeare, portrays love as a form of passionate and violent force that comes with both rewards and consequences.The tragedy focuses on two young lovers called Romeo and Juliet, whose families are intertwined in an ancient feud that disrupts the peace in Verona, Italy. For love, the two teenagers are driven to overcome obstacles they will never imagine doing, and as

  • Romeo and Juliet

    1842 Words  | 4 Pages

    and "Romeo and Juliet" by Shakespeare are great examples of love that is tested by various challenges and complications. There simply is no more commonly quoted or alluded to dramatist or author in the Western world, nor a storyteller with more films to his individual credit. He helped to invent the modern English language and his dramatic corpus engulfs what is universal and essential in human philosophy, spirituality, and wisdom. His name itself is a metonym for artistic culture. Romeo and Juliet

  • Romeo and Juliet

    1085 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Merriam-Webster Dictionary gives seven definitions of love (excluding religious and sports definitions), ranging from sexual desire to warm affection. Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet explores this spectrum through various characters’ attitudes toward the nebulous word. The expression, emotion, and worth varies, yet the label remains constant. Shakespeare’s greatness, perhaps, then stems from the portrayal of how apposed viewpoints of love can come from the same species--the same town or family