Being passionate about something always leads to death. To elaborate, when one is passionate about something, one feels like oneself has a duty to defend and protect what one is passionate about. For example, in Romeo and Juliet, they are both extremely passionate about one another and they get married after a few days of knowing one another. After their wedding, things go downhill and they end up killing themselves so they can be together. Also, in Ethan Frome, Ethan and Mattie desired to be with each other so he offered to drive her somewhere and it turned into them trying to kill themselves by hitting a tree so they could also be together. Throughout Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare and Ethan Frome by Edith Wharton, duty and passion are present; but …show more content…
For instance, “Take thou this vial, being then in bed, and this distilling liquor drinking thou off....all thy veins shall run a cold and drowsy humor: for no pulse(Shakespeare IV.I.95-98). Friar Lawerence mixes a potion that will make Juliet seem dead so she can get out of marrying Paris and it works until Friar Lawerence realizes Romeo has no idea and thinks Juliet is actually dead so he kills himself so he thinks they will be together when they die. Friar Lawrence made the decision to give Juliet this potion in less than a minute. His thought process clearly had a serious effect on the outcome of this plan, because Romeo and Juliet both died at the end. In many novels and stories, characters make decisions with no reason behind them, or so it seems. People usually do things to get what they want or desire, but they most likely do it without looking far ahead or at the consequences. For example, “I’m going to drive you over, Matt,’ he whispered. She murmured back; ‘I think Zeena wants me to go with Jotham”(Wharton 128). Ethan quickly decided he wanted to drive Mattie, and not