The Blame for Romeo and Juliet
The Blame for Romeo and Juliet's Death Fate was the destiny of one couple. In the tragic love story of Romeo and Juliet written by William Shakespeare, their fate becomes death. Fate is the only thing that is responsible for their deaths and it can't be blamed on any one person. In the story of Romeo and Juliet, two rival siblings fall in love with each other. Fate takes all the blame for the couple's death because it is what brought them together in the first place, fate believed only their deaths would bring an end to their family's feud, and fate is why certain dilemmas occurred to make matters worse. Romeo and Juliet's family's are worst of enemies, but fate refused to let the young lovers from being together. The first time Romeo and Juliet meet is at the Capulet's Ball and Romeo asks a servant, "What lady is that, which doth enrich the
Why two families have such a hatred for each other is unexplainable. In the end their hatred would bring upon the death of their own children. In the very beginning of the story a fight breaks out in the streets of Verona between the rivals. The quote, " Do you quarrel, sir?" proposes that the fight is about to begin and they battle in the streets until Prince Esculas comes to stop it.. The second example of the hatred between the Capulets and Montagues is when Tybalt fights Mercutio and kills him, but then in vengeance Romeo kills Tybalt. "Draw Benvolio, beat down their weapons", that quote shows they want to fight. The fight showed how stubborn Tybalt was for not listening to what Romeo had to say because hatred had clogged his mind. Romeo and Juliet's death was only the outcome of fate's doing. Fate first introduced Romeo and Juliet to each
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Approximate Word count = 578
Approximate Pages = 2 (250 words per page double spaced)
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