Tybalt is violent and at the same time he is courageous. While he was enjoying himself at the Capulet ball he noticed someone’s voice and the way they spoke, that they were a Montague and not a Capulet. He requested that someone should fetch his sword and called out “Now by the stock and honor of my kin, to strike him dead I hold it now a sin” and was very angry (1.5,55). This quotation shows that he is violent because it tells us that he wouldn’t hesitate to kill someone and even he did, he wouldn’t think of it as a sin. This is a very important character trait to have when participating in the Hunger Games because the whole objective of it is to be the last one alive. If he’s willing to kill someone because they attended a ball, he will have no doubt if he had to kill an enemy and with those actions it will bring us far in the game. In addition, he is also courageous because when two servants of the Capulet’s household and two servants of the Montague’s were fighting, he arrived at the scene and instantly got involved insulting the Montague’s. He shouted “What, are thou drawn among these heartless hinds? Turn thee Benvolio! Look up thy death” (1.1,58). This shows that he is courageous because when he saw the conflict and his friends, his first instincts were to get involved and give them some back up. Tybalt would be a great asset because it shows me that if I were in trouble he would come and rescue me. He would stand up and try to defend me if someone was targeting me, making me feel more confident.
Romeo is peaceful and extremely poetic. When he was talking to his cousin about why he was so depressed, they see men being carried on stretchers and that’s when Romeo started explaining to Benvolio what he was feeling. He said, “Yet tell me not, for I have herd it