Romeo and Juliet is notorious for being a timeless story due to the enduring theme of teenage rebellion seen in our own society and literature today. Romeo of the Montague family is a headstrong character whose nature can be seen as immensely impetuous. He falls extremely in love with a girl named Juliet of the Capulet family, the Montague’s rival. In William Shakespeare’s play, Romeo and Juliet, Romeo is ultimately the origin of the deaths of both himself and Juliet because of his passionate belief in fate, his impulsive disposition, and his dependency on Juliet. Romeo’s extreme reliance on fate makes him feel powerless to help himself, so he makes rash decisions, causing the deaths of himself and Juliet. Romeo is mistakenly invited to a …show more content…
He has an unfortunate dream about attending the Capulet party and explains his unsettling feelings, “And we mean well in going to this masque, / But ’tis no wit to go . . . I dreamt a dream tonight” (1.4.50-53). Although Romeo specifically states he had an unpromising dream about the Capulet masquerade, he continues to the event because Romeo believes he cannot avoid his unfortunate destiny, even if his dreams warn him. This essentially exhibits how fate makes Romeo feel powerless of his own life decisions. If Romeo would have listened to the warning, and not relied on fate to just attend the party anyway, he never would have met Juliet in the first …show more content…
For example, Romeo continues to whine about banishment and states, “Heaven is here, where Juliet lives, and every cat and dog / And little mouse, every unworthy thing, / Live here in heaven and may look on her, but Romeo may not” (3.3.32-35). The expert accurately shows Romeo’s dependency on Juliet because instead of focusing on a plan for Romeo to be accepted back into Verona, he is complaining about insignificant animals being able to see Juliet. Romeo’s dependency on Juliet causes him to do anything he can to make sure he is always with Juliet, even take his own life to be with Juliet in her