Placing all of your faith in love, above everything else could lead to tragic outcomes. Especially in Romeo and Juliet’s case. Secretly navigating a relationship around two feuding families is industrious work, but is advantageous for the intense love Romeo and Juliet have for one another. Roses portray the feelings of love and passion in Romeo and Juliet by elucidating love cannot be forbidden, it grows stronger and deeper over time, and it is worth the trouble it may cause. To Romeo and Juliet, love matters more than anything else. The play is based around romance and relationships, which is why love is such a key component. Their feuding families make it more difficult for Romeo and Juliet to have a relationship, but they still push through …show more content…
Juliet says to Romeo, “This bud of love, by summer’s ripening breath, may prove a beauteous flow’r when next we meet.” (Shakespeare 2.2.121-122) By this she means, their instantaneous love is young now and will have already grown more beautiful and more mature by the time they next meet. Romeo and Juliet so quickly made up their minds that they wanted to be together forever. They spent every hour apart envisioning their future lives together and creating plans to make it all work out for them in the …show more content…
Romeo ponders, “Is love a tender thing?It is too rough, too rude, too boist’rous, and it pricks like a thorn.” (Shakespeare 1.4.25-26) Romeo is thinking about the emotional damage love can cause, in relation to the physical damage rose thorns cause when pricking skin. Romeo and Juliet face many challenges in their relationship, but they still stay together. Their reasoning for this is they think it is worth it for love and hope it will all work out in the end. Nothing can rip the lovers apart from each other. Not the deaths of loved ones, not Romeo’s banishment, and exceptionally not the on-going decades, maybe even centuries long hatred their families have for one another. The untimely deaths they experienced together are due to their parents' vexatious and absurd hatred for each