ipl-logo

Keeping Secrets In Shakespeare's Romeo And Juliet

800 Words4 Pages

In William Shakespeare’s play Romeo and Juliet, the two protagonists are essentially trying to keep their relationship away from their feuding parents and protect each other. Romeo and Juliet know that if they do not keep their relationship a secret, their parents will try to keep them apart because of the Montague and Capulet feud. As a result of this secrecy, Romeo and Juliet die .Therefore, if the parents had dropped the feud and made peace, then their children would not have had to keep secrets from them, and all could have lived happily together. Romeo and Juliet, in many ways show how the lies and secrets they keep from their family affect how they love each other and whether or not they will live happily ever after. When Romeo goes …show more content…

When Juliet warns Romeo that he will be killed if her relatives discover him, this starts a continuous theme of betrayal towards the lovers families, eventually causing Romeo and Juliet to continue keeping secrets. After discovering that Romeo has been banished, Juliet goes to see Friar Lawrence and says, “O, bid me leap, rather than marry Paris,/ From off the battlements of yonder tower;/ Or walk in thievish ways; or bid me lurk/ Where serpents are; chain me with roaring …show more content…

During the fight on the streets, Capulet says, “ What noise is this? Give me my longsword, ho!/… My sword, I say! Old Montague is come, / And flourishes his blade in spite of me.” (1.1 94-96) Here Capulet asks what was all this noise in the street about is and immediately gets his sword so that he can go fight also. This just proves how not even the parents are able to set an example or their kids ad be civil and to just imagine what would happen if Romeo and Juliet went to their parents and told them that they were in love, it would just escalate even more, leading back to why they must keep their relationship a secret. After this Montague responds, “Thou villain Capulet, --- Hold me not, let me go.” (1.1 98) Montague calls Capulet a villain and tells his wife to let him go so that he could fight. Once again, one of the parents engage in an argument instead of being civil and letting it go, proving to both Romeo and Juliet that telling their parents is the wrong route to take. Again showing how the parents not liking each other, keep Romeo and Juliet further

Open Document