Romeo and Juliet is a romantic tragedy written by William Shakespeare. It is about two young children from feuding families that fall in love. In only a few days of meeting each other they get married, Romeo gets banished and Juliet is forced to marry Paris. Juliet then fakes her death to stop the marriage but Romeo thinks it’s genuine so he kills himself. Juliet wakes up and sees Romeo dead, so she suicides as well. Unbridled passion, in this play, is to blame for the deaths of the young lovers to a certain extent. It was definitely a contributing factor but other factors were involved, such as fate and loyalty.
Unbridled passion plays the biggest part in contributing to the deaths of Romeo and Juliet. Since their love was unrestricted, the
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Even in the prologue, it says ‘star-cross’d lovers’ meaning that their love is doomed to fail. Upon their first meeting, the ‘star-cross’d lovers’ are immediately attracted to each other, but they are unaware that they are enemies. If they never met, none of this would have occurred. Another event that happened because of fate was Romeo’s banishment. If Tybalt had not of kill Mercutio, Romeo would never have killed Tybalt, therefore Romeo wouldn’t have been banished. Fate strikes again with the delivery of the message to Romeo about Juliet’s plan. If the message got to Romeo, then he wouldn’t have killed himself when she saw Juliet ‘dead’. If Juliet woke up later than when she did, she wouldn’t have killed herself because she would have had support from her family and she wouldn’t have seen Romeo like that. Yet again, fate strikes with the moving of Juliet’s marriage to Paris to an earlier date. If this didn’t happen then she wouldn’t have taken the sleeping potion so early giving less time for the message to reach Romeo. The whole play is one massive example of how cruel and unforgivable fate can be, and also it has the power to make or break anything, including a potentially great love, such as Romeo and Juliet’s. Maybe it all happened to turn the feuding families thoughts around. All of this shows how fate is also to blame, along with unbridled passion to the deaths of the young