Romeo And Juliet Hate

1175 Words5 Pages

“Did my heart love till now?’ Forswear it sight! For I ne’er saw true beauty till this night.”Act one , scene five. Two truly profound lovers, Romeo and Juliet facing against the grudge between these two families. These two families, as in the Capulets and, the Montagues abomination are what is restraining this desirable, beloved pair from being with one another. The mass of hatred these twain rivals have is absolutely gratuitous. The audience, which in this case is us, were never quite frankly informed as to why the Montagues and Capulets despise each other so abundantly. We just so happened to be left with our assumptions or inference on the situation. However, as human beings, we all aware that the feeling of hate is not necessary, …show more content…

For instance it states that the dispute between these two ‘households’ are rising once again. The prologue also know as the sneak peak of the story, that these families standing in the same social radar will be embraced in a quite chaotic, and complex setting. To be more precise, the term brusque would definitely be perfectly fitting to define this situation in this family hostility. Which in fact is also substantially briefed in the beginning. It declares, and I quote, “ from ancient grudge break to new mutiny, where civil blood makes civil hands unclean.” shakespeare has a tendency of making very bold statements in the form of foreshadowing the upcoming. The preamble of Romeo and Juliet is a perfect example. Furthermore, the introduction gives us the whole foundation of this love story catastrophe. Where then the points of all the final results all from the effect of the family feud, including the main tragedy of the two lovers. For this reason affirms the basic following. The consequences of hate, that interferes with the power of …show more content…

However this ‘affliction’ is the two ‘star cross’ individuals whom are both victims of love. They were born in families that carried the feeling of outrage for one another's relatives. Romeo and Juliet saw surpass all of that. They were both bottled up with deep affection and fondness towards each other. Act two , scene two, demonstrates Juliet’s perspective with the entire overall issue. She professes, “O Romeo, Rome! Wherefore art thou Romeo? Deny thy father and refuse thy name. Of if thou wilt not, be but sworn my love…. And I’ll no longer be a capulet.” in addition, Juliet's parents were already planning on an arranged marriage, who was not the man she wanted. The night after the party that was held by the Capulets, Romeo and Juliet ironically got married by the Friar. There intentions were however different. The Friar was hoping that’d it would end the feud between the two names, Although, the newly married couple were to blind withing their love to care at that time being. There was absolutely no worry in the world over all their problems that surround them. They were in their own little universe, but despite all that things were not at all so great afterwards. The matter between the Montagues and Capulets magnified. It came to the point where the audience comprehend and put at test the how much love Romeo and Juliet shared. Whereas they sacrificed themselves.