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Analyzing Themes In William Shakespeare's Romeo And Juliet

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"A work of literature must provide more than factual accuracy or vivid physical reality... it must tell us more than we already know." - E. M. Forster. When stories are read from when we are younger until now, there is always a central message, or a theme. Growing older, we find more depth in stories from school or leisure activities that have more to do with the themes that we have learned when we were younger. Some of the stories we have read are 'The Ugly Duckling,' 'Goldie-Locks and the Three Bears,' princess stories such as 'Rapunzel' or 'Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs,' just to name a few, but as we know they are unrealistic stories that probably would not actually happen. Back to the quote, literature must have some more depth to the …show more content…

Romeo is 16, a Montague and Juliet is 14, a Capulet. Romeo gets “dumped” by 'the love of his life', Rosalie, and his friends decide to cheer him up by crashing a Capulet party. There he meets Juliet without knowing her house until they are both told by the nurse. They get married in three days and on his wedding day Romeo slays Tybalt, Juliet's cousin. Romeo is exiled the next day and Juliet is engaged to another man. Friar Laurence tells Romeo to go to live in Mantua until he sends for him and he and Juliet can be together once the plan is set. Juliet is given a potion to make her fall into a deep sleep for a day, in which the potion will slow her heart and make her appear dead. Messages get confused, Romeo thinks she's dead, kills himself, Juliet awakes to find him dead and kills herself, thus the feud over once the children are dead. The central message of this story is that holding a grudge, means losing the things that are most important to you. The children story that can go best with this theme is “Brier Rabbit”. The fox really wanted to eat the rabbit because it always escaped him, and when he finally did, he got outsmarted. He put the rabbit in the pot and the rabbit fooled him by saying this feels nice, like a warm bath, but do not put me in the brier-patch. However, the fox didn't dare to think about the where the rabbit was raised, so he threw him out into the brier-patch and the rabbit said, “I was born and raised in the brier-patch,” and escaped. Again the message in a simple and complex story can and are the

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