It is often to find people's love life to turn into unexpected circumstances. Many start their relationship with the thought to stay forever, despite it possibly can end with a lifelong parting. The play Romeo and Juliet presents a pair of star-crossed lovers that promised to stay together eternally but ended with tragedy. In this play, William Shakespeare analyzes fate through foreshadowing, imagery, and personification to develop a message that life will always fall in a predestinated order without the exception of love. Shakespeare uses foreshadowing as a technique to portray the predoom of Romeo and Juliet. For instance, as Romeo arrived at the party of the Capulets, he dreamt an ominous dream about the party, “bitterly begin his fearful date With this night's revels, and expire the term Of a despisèd life closed in my breast By some vile forfeit of untimely death.”(1.4.106-110) Parallel to this quote, this party becomes the beginning of his destruction, …show more content…
For instance, after Romeo kills his lover, Juliet’s cousin as revenge for Mercutio's death, he exclaims, “O, I am fortune's fool!”(3.1.135). Shakespeare personifies fortune and identifies Romeo to be a fool of it, presenting for it to be an undefeatable force. Likewise, Juliet cries out after Romeo is exiled, “O fortune, fortune, all men call thee fickle. If thou art fickle, what dost thou with him That is renowned for faith? Be fickle, fortune, For then, I hope, thou wilt not keep him long,”(3.5.60-63) Juliet personifies and asks fortune to not keep Romeo away for too long, however, Romeo ends up dying, keeping him in a farther place then she wanted him to be at. This quote concludes that fate is an overpowering force that only follows up the predestined order. Personification in Romeo and Juliet reveals how cruel the fixed path to tragedy is, especially for