Love, fate, and free will are shown throughout Romeo and Juliet. Although fate plays a role, the Montague and Capulet family feud, Romeo falling for Juliet Capulet, the tragic deaths of several Monatgues and Capulets, miscommunication, and the devastating deaths of Romeo and Juliet are all tough choices they have made. In William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, free will plays a more significant role in the tragic ending of William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. Romeo and Juliet meet at a party. Romeo came to this party having no idea who he was going to meet. Romeo and Juliet meet and know they have to see each other again. “It is my lady, O it is my love!” Romeo had snuck over to the Capulets’ house to see Juliet. After this, they agree …show more content…
Juliet drinks a potion that makes her look dead so she gets out of marrying Paris, Romeo takes poison willingly because he thinks Juliet is dead, then Juliet sees that Romeo is dead and stabs herself. Juliet is very stressted about the whole “getting married” to Paris, especially since her father had decided to move the date of the ceremony. She then goes to the Friar and gets a potion that will make her appear dead for 48 hours, Juliet takes it. As Juliet drinks the potion she wonders, “How if, when I am laid into the tomb, I wake before the time that Romeo Comes to redeem me? There’s a scary point! Shall I not then be stifled in the vault, To whose foul mouth no healthsome air breathes in, And there die strangled ere my Romeo comes?”Juliet fears that she may never wake up after she takes this potion but is willing to do it so Romeo and she can be together forever. Romeo has been banished and doesn’t realize that the whole Juliet situation is a lie, he insists that he has to go and see her immediately. After he stops at the apothecary and asks. As Romeo makes this connection he still takes the poison. The choice to drink the poison was very erratic. The Friar was on the way as Juliet woke up. “Thy husband there lies dead.” “I dare no longer stay.” The death has barely even been processed through Juliet’s brain and she decides to grab Romeo's dagger and stab herself with it. Romeo and Juliet decide to kill themselves because there was so much miscommunication going on between everything. Juliet was getting married again, Romeo was getting sent to another town, and the Friar was trying to help out in the middle, and everything that could’ve gone wrong