Families hate toward one another can lead to serious consequences like death. Indeed this paradox is explored in William Shakespeare’s famous play, “The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet,” as he introduces Juliet, a young beautiful teenage girl from the Capulet family who falls in love with Romeo, a handsome and attractive young boy from the Montague family. In the beginning of the play, both the Capulet and Montague family hate each other. In the following play Romeo gets to meet Juliet at a masquerade party held at Juliet’s home. This is where Romeo along with Juliet fall in love with one another and later on decide it’s best if they get married to one another but in secret without letting anyone know. Little did both Romeo and Juliet know that …show more content…
Following this, Thisbe arrived first at the Tomb of Ninus and patiently waited for Pyramus to arrive, but then out of nowhere a lioness appeared. This frightened Thisbe and while she fled her cloak fell. Whenever Pyramus came to the Tomb of Ninus he noticed a shredded cloak with blood stains thinking it was his fault for Thisbe’s death, and so he grabbed his sword and stabbed himself. According to the text, “Thisbe was dead. “He had let his love, a tender maide, come alone to a place full of danger, and not been there first to protect her.” “It is I who killed you,” he said. “Now,” he said, “you shall drink my blood too. He drew his sword and plunged it into his side” (Ovid, 488-489). This evidence proves that Pyramus is making himself culpable for Thisbe’s death and assuming that Thisbe is really dead because of what he had seen on the ground and so he decided to murder himself. For this reason, it’s obvious that deaths occur due to doing things in a hurried manner without observing things right the first