In William Shakespeare’s “Romeo and Juliet”, Rome’s first feeling of fate is show as he says “Some consequence yet hanging in the starts“(I.iv.106). This clearly displays that Romeo has a feeling of independing doom or more specifically something terrible is bound to happen. His fate is hung by a thread that will break sooner or later. This quote is also shown as a foreshadow because Romeo eventually dies later on in the book. Secondly, Romeo kills Tylbalt out of anger from killing Mercutio then blames it on fate “O I am fortunes fool”(III.i.13). This quote means that Romeo is mainly trying to deprive himself of the blame; says that it is Tybalt’s fate to die and also says that the fates tricked him into doing such deed. Thirdly, and yet one of Romeo’s final quotes, “Is it ee’n so?- Then I defy you stars”(V.i.24). This quote indicates that when Romeo heard the news about his true love dying, he immediately blames it on …show more content…
Starting off with one of Juliet’s most well-known quotes from the book “My only love sprung from my only hate” (I.v.137). This quote signifies that Juliet’s first and only love of her life thinking it is fate that paired them together and also he is a Montague named Romeo, thus forbidding her from socializing with him or marrying him. She later breaks these rules by secretly meeting with him later on in the book. Secondly, Juliet says “O’ God I have an ill-diving soul”(III.v.54). This quote expresses the fact that Juliet has an ill-diving soul or in other words, a foreboding soul which foreshadows Romeo’s eventual fate or death at the bottom of a tomb. Thirdly, one of Juliet’s finishing quotes “O fortune, fortune! All men call thee fickle if tho ont fickle, what doust thou with him... Be fickle Be fickle... Send him back”(III.v.60-64). This quote clearly demonstrates that when Romeo is banished from the kingdom and Juliet is pleading to the fates to keep him safe along his