Romeo And Juliet Moral Essay

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Morality is crucial in decision-making and affects events that unfold in a person’s lifetime, representing what is universally right or wrong. The lack of morals can change the way a moment occurs since that way of thinking conflicts with society. As the majority, society isolates the individual and results in an appropriate punishment and suffering, whether that be betrayal, confusion, grief, loss, legal prosecution, or death. This summarizes the tragic life of the leading characters in Shakespeare’s play, Romeo and Juliet, telling the story of their love, and how various decisions that characters make result in their deaths, as well as their suffering and those around them. It is clear the abandonment of moral principles is the primary cause …show more content…

Characters demonstrate this by making hasty promises, to achieve their desires, resulting in unnecessary loss and grief. Such as while Juliet plays dead to get out of a marriage with Paris, miscommunication with Romeo leads him to believe she is truly gone and he makes a choice on impulse to kill himself alongside her, and as she wakes up shortly after, she notices that “[His] lips are warm” (V, iii, 167). When Romeo kills himself, Juliet awakens less than an hour later, and she realizes this chain of events at this moment. Her observation includes diction, with the word choice of ‘lips’ and ‘warm’ representing their romance and feelings of tenderness, love, and affection. Furthermore, the romance blossoming between Romeo and Juliet is impulsive and abrupt, as, after just meeting, they kiss and fall in love instantly. The consequences of their actions come later, when their true identities as the only children of the opposing families of Capulet and Montague, and with frustration, Juliet exclaims, “My only love sprung from my only hate!” (I, v, 137). This moment is an example of antithesis, as the two opposing ideas of ‘love’ and ‘hate’ are used, in parallel to one another, to compare them and highlight Juliet’s feelings of regret, frustration, and sorrow. Overall, Romeo’s irrational suicide and the impulsive romance between him and Juliet …show more content…

The oblivion to the rules of Verona as to who is found guilty in violent outbreaks, to fulfill the instant gratification of revenge, resulting in exile shows this. A fight between Tybalt and Mercutio shows this, as it results in Mercutio’s death and Romeo, as an act of revenge, kills Tybalt. The Prince exiles him, a fate worse than death in his eyes as he expresses that, “there is no world without Verona walls, / But purgatory, torture, hell itself” (III, iii, 17-18). Romeo uses hyperbole to describe his loathing of his punishment, comparing his exile to hell, everlasting torture. The Friar displays this as well as he associates himself with the romance and death between Romeo and Juliet, involving himself in the feud between Montague and Capulet as well. After the Watch finds the bodies of the two lovers, Friar Lawrence becomes the primary suspect as he was near the crime scene at the time of death. Now he must face the law and receive judgement, as he remarks, with sorrow, “And here I stand both to impeach and purge / Myself condemnèd and myself excused” (V, iii, 226-227). The Friar uses antithesis at this moment to convey the feelings of uncertainty in his legal jardin. In brief, the ignorance of laws and regulations to enjoy the instantaneous gratification of revenge and others due to accusation and betrayal results in