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Tragic Consequences In Shakespeare's Romeo And Juliet

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Love and its tragic consequences in Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. Love is one of the main themes throughout William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. It is noticeable how affection grows between the two teenagers, and how their lives unfold after they have found each other. Love is a double-edge sword, a force that can drive affection and hope, but it also can drive hate, rivalry, violence and death. In this story, love and violence are the main reasons why tragedy sets throughout the town of Verona.
In the prologue, Shakespeare lets the reader in on the main point of the play and how the story ends, describing it as “the sad story of their death-marked love” (Shakespeare p. 5). From the start, the play is destined to end with the …show more content…

This time is Juliet he uses to convey the message:
“Oh, God! I have a bad feeling about this!
I see you, there on the ground,
As one dead in the bottom of a tomb.” (Shakespeare p.65)
He uses foreshadowing this time to remind us, that even though Romeo is going to be safe if he leaves, the imminent death of the character is coming and he will be lying in a tomb with his beloved Juliet. Juliet also mentions latter her death by a dagger to the friar, when she is trying to find a solution to her forced marriage to Paris, another example of foreshadowing.
The chain of tragic and violent events keep adding on as the time for the main characters to part this world comes closer. After learning, of Juliet’s supposed death, Romeo rushed to her death bed with poison in hand but he encounters Paris at Juliet's tomb, as he is also suffering from her death to the extent that he threatens Romeo with death if he doesn't leave. But Romeo’s need to join her love in death is greater:
“Gentle sir, do not tempt a desperate man.
Fly from here and leave me.
I beg you, do not make me angry!
By heaven, I love you better than

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