Romeo And Juliet Compassion Essay

758 Words4 Pages

Love and compassion are vital for individuals to have a sense of purpose. In “Romeo and Juliet,” by William Shakespeare, Romeo, and Juliet struggle to maintain their love for each other. The couple’s recognition of the hatred between their families leads them to keep their relationship secret, and their boundless love for one another influences their future. Romeo and Juliet first must overcome the hatred between their families, but later have to find a sense of purpose when they must live without each other. The couple struggles to prevail over the harsh reality that their families have put on them, and they decide to risk losing their family name and lives, ultimately to be with one another. Initially, Romeo is amazed by Juliet’s beauty and …show more content…

“Good-night, good-night” - Good-night! Parting is such sweet sorrow/ That I shall say good-night till it be morrow.” By using an oxymoron, Shakespeare strongly shows Juliet's feelings of sadness and regret as Romeo leaves her. This loneliness is deepened for both lovers following Romeo's banishment and they begin to question why they need to be alive if one can not be with the other. Juliet becomes angered by the idea that she is forced by her father to marry Paris following Romeo's exile and threatens to kill herself. “ O, bid me leap, rather than marry Paris,/ From the battlements of yonder tower,/ Or walk in thievish ways, or bid me lurk/ Where serpents are; chain me with roaring bears,/ Or shut me nightly in a charnel-house,/ O’er-cover’d quite with dead men’s rattling bones,/ With reeky shanks and yellow chapless skulls;/ Or bid me go into a new-made grave/ And hide me with a dead William Shakespeare firmly enforces Juliet's feelings of anger in this quote by stating terrible outcomes such as jumping from a tower, implying that Juliet would rather be dead than marry …show more content…

“Ha, banish me, banish! Be merciful, say “death”; “For exile hath more terror in his sight,”. This quote shows how emotionally driven, arrogant, and immature Romeo is as he wished he was punished with death instead of exile for taking Tybalt’s life so that he would not have to live in a world without Juliet. Romeo and Juliet's behavior reveals a human tendency to push towards love, driven by physical appearance instead of actions and personality. The relationship came to a deadly end and was heavily impacted by the division between the Montagues and Capulets. However, the immaturity of Romeo and Juliet most strongly led to their deaths, as their love was so strong that they could not live without each other. By allowing their feelings to interfere with reality, Romeo and Juliet affected their own lives and the lives of the ones they love, and their actions led to the struggles they ultimately could not overcome. Through Romeo and Juliet's struggle to maintain their love, Shakespeare shows that immaturity and the willingness to overcome uncontrollable challenges will inevitably lead to greater struggles and a loss of