Love can be blinding and overwhelming as powerfully as hate can. The link between Romeo and Juliet seem to be heading toward death. When Romeo crashes the party, Tybalt wants to kill him badly just as Romeo sees Juliet and falls in love. From there, love pushes the young couple towards love and violence, not away. Both have thoughts of suicide and the willingness to try it out. Romeo gets a knife from Friar Lawrence and threatens to kill himself. Juliet also takes a knife to do so in front of Friar Lawrence. After father Capulet decides for Juliet to marry Paris, Juliet says, "If all else fail, myself have power to die" (3.5.253). Showing that this quote compares how similar Romeo and Juliet think of death at the same day and only some time apart. Both of them, Romeo and Juliet, imagines that each other are dead. Juliet says, "Methinks I see thee, now thou art below, as one dead in the bottom of a tomb" (3.5.56-57). The theme continues until the tragic of both of themselves committing suicide. However, death conserves their profound love that no one can now take away. The time comes for everyone to gaze upon Romeo and Juliet's bodies. The Prince exclaims, "For never was a story more wore than this of Juliet and her Romeo" (5.3.20-21). This quote shows the Prince explaining that if it had not been for the family feud, Romeo and Juliet, could've lived and loved without being so secret and they could've lived forever as a happy
Love can be blinding and overwhelming as powerfully as hate can. The link between Romeo and Juliet seem to be heading toward death. When Romeo crashes the party, Tybalt wants to kill him badly just as Romeo sees Juliet and falls in love. From there, love pushes the young couple towards love and violence, not away. Both have thoughts of suicide and the willingness to try it out. Romeo gets a knife from Friar Lawrence and threatens to kill himself. Juliet also takes a knife to do so in front of Friar Lawrence. After father Capulet decides for Juliet to marry Paris, Juliet says, "If all else fail, myself have power to die" (3.5.253). Showing that this quote compares how similar Romeo and Juliet think of death at the same day and only some time apart. Both of them, Romeo and Juliet, imagines that each other are dead. Juliet says, "Methinks I see thee, now thou art below, as one dead in the bottom of a tomb" (3.5.56-57). The theme continues until the tragic of both of themselves committing suicide. However, death conserves their profound love that no one can now take away. The time comes for everyone to gaze upon Romeo and Juliet's bodies. The Prince exclaims, "For never was a story more wore than this of Juliet and her Romeo" (5.3.20-21). This quote shows the Prince explaining that if it had not been for the family feud, Romeo and Juliet, could've lived and loved without being so secret and they could've lived forever as a happy