He jests at scars that never felt a wound.
JULIET enters on the balcony.
ROMEO (aside) She speaks.
O, speak again, bright angel! For thou art
As glorious to this night, being o'er my head,
As is a wingèd messenger of heaven
Unto the white, upturnèd, wondering eyes
Of mortals that …show more content…
Romeo feels that he can sacrifice his life just to meet Juliet again. Afterwards when Romeo sneaks into Juliet’s courtyard, he hears Juliet speaking of him. She says how her love toward Rome supersedes all other values, loyalties, and emotion. Juliet said, “Deny thy father and refuse thy name.... Or if thou wilt not, be but sworn my love, / And I’ll no longer be a Capulet”(II.ii.34-36). In this phrase she is saying that she doesn’t care that Romeo is one of the people who are the enemy of Capulet’s house and saying that these factors shouldn’t affect their …show more content…
But this leads to some decisions that are not rational. In the last few acts, Romeo doesn't receive Friar Lawrence’s letter and thinks that Juliet is really dead. He went back to Verona with a death potion and sacrifices his life, saying that he doesn’t have a purpose to live if Juliet is gone. Moments after he dies, Juliet wakes up and sees her love dead beside her. She says,
“what's here a cup closed in my true love's hand poison i see hath been his timeless end. oh churl drunk all and left no friendly drop to help me after. i will kiss thy lips some poisin doth hang on them, to help me die with a restorative. thy lips are warm. yea noise then ill be brief oh happy dagger this is thy sheath. there rust and let me die.”
(V.iii.167-71)
and sacrifices her life as well. Juliet also felt the same way as Romeo did. She found no purpose in living if Romeo is dead. Romeo and Juliet does not make a specific moral statement or theme about the relationships between love and society, and family. It portrays the mayhem and passion of being in love, combining images of violence, love, death, and family in an evocative rush leading to the play’s tragic