Subject: English Grade Level: 10 Lesson Rationale: To examine the characters and relationships in terms of the kinds of love that are represented and find textual examples that illustrate them in Romeo and Juliet I.R.P.: English Language Arts 8-10 Learning Outcomes / Lesson Objectives: The student will be able to: (Engagement) – develop imaginative or creative response to share ideas (Critical Analysis) – demonstrate their awareness of how the artful use of language can affect and influence others (Personal Awareness) – demonstrate commitment to increasing their proficiency in all aspects of communications (Working Together) – demonstrate their commitment to collective goals Real World Application: For students to relate the type of love presented in Romeo and Juliet and compare it to their own lives and relationships Materials: R & J text, Relationship Journals, and loose-leaf paper Introduction: (10min) Show students Act II, scene ii (Balcony scene)…
Shakespeare uses a variety of techniques in Romeo and Juliet in order to enhance the reader’s experience and to communicate messages through his work. For instance, the use of celestial imagery contributes to the tragic tone of the play, because it suggests the inevitable end to the main characters. Notably in the opening of the play, the reader hears: “A pair of star-crossed lovers take their life” (I.Prologue.6). Likewise, before Romeo enters the Capulet party he tells his friends: “I fear, too early; for my mind misgives/ Some consequence, yet hanging in the stars,/ Shall bitterly begin with this sweet date/ Of a despised life, closed in my breast,/ By some vile forfeit of untimely death. (I.iv.116-121). Celestial imagery is a form of author’s craft that uses the…
Choosing between telling the truth and keeping a secret are both hard decisions to make. In the play, Romeo and Juliet, these decisions can make or break a situation. The play is all about secrets kept and truths to be told, which end up causing the death of the star-crossed lovers. The story between the two lovers is that their affection for one another is a secret to each opposing houses. Was the secret worth keeping? As some characters helped disguise the love, others couldn’t keep it a secret. Romeo and Juliet were betrayed by a close friend who made plans that ended up fraudulent to both Romeo & Juliet, when the real job was to keep the love alive. Friar Lawrence is the definite reason for the deaths of the ill-fated lovers.…
Romeo tries to break up the fight, but Tybalt kills Mercutio and then Romeo kills Tybalt.…
This play is about a boy named Romeo and girl named Juliet. Their family are mortal enemies so that means that they are always fighting with one another. At a Capulet party Romeo and Juliet meet for the first time not knowing who each other are, until later that night that they are enemies. They begin to fall in love with each other and get married after meeting for one night. Then the drama gets to their head and they kill themselves. In Romeo and Juliet Capulet’s and Montague’s, Friar Lawrence, and Balthasar are responsible for the tragic deaths of Romeo and Juliet.…
Lines 36-39 and 41-52 of Act 2; Scene 2, are significant to me because they have distinct levels of understanding and meaning to the play. Line 41 goes back to the original conflict that Romeo and Juliet are from feuding houses, the Capulets and the Montagues. It shows that Juliet does not want her family to fight the Montagues, and that she believes it is ridiculous because it is not the people they hate and fight it is their name, Montague. The section I chose reveals that the kids, Romeo and Juliet, feel that they can not have what they want because of the parents’ feuds. It makes you feel as helpless as they are, because you know that with their parents’ permission to get married, they would be happy.…
In Shakespeare’s novel, Romeo and Juliet, a huge event occurs in which Romeo get’s banished from the city of Verona. All the characters in this story view the banishment in different perspectives. The one whom was exiled, Romeo, views his banishment as equal to death. One of Romeo’s supporters, Friar Lawrence, views Romeo’s banishment as an act of mercy. Clearly, Romeo’s banishment reveals the difference in perspective between Romeo and Friar Lawrence.…
"The older you are, the wiser you get." is a well known proverb that provides insight in human tendencies to be impulsive, perfunctory and hasty. Part of maturing as a human being comes from understanding a predicament, deducing a solution and carefully reasoning whether there will be any consequences and if they would be worth it. Impulsive acts flaunt incompetence and immaturity. Albeit embarrassing regardless, there are often more resilient consequences than merely looking foolish for acting in manners that jeopardize goals and contravene strategies of success. Failing to analyze any situation appropriately in the heat of the moment incurs undesirable outcomes such as a punishment of some sort or in some cases, death. This is the message that William Shakespeare tries to convey in his infamous play, Romeo and Juliet. This play revolves around characters from two rival families that elicit their deaths and that of several others due to their impulsive personalities. Romeo, Juliet and Tybalt each let a particular emotion cloud their judgement, causing them to make decisions with no prior thoughts of consideration for consequences. Their lack of will to resist and control their desires becomes the cause of their demise.…
Love, with its binding, twisting labyrinth of emotions, often has diverse effects on those caught in its grasp. To the lovers in Shakespeare's Romeo & Juliet, love is an overwhelming, overpowering emotion to which all else must yield. Both of the teenagers felt an immediate tug at the first sight of one another and desperately acknowledged that nothing was to be left in the onslaught of that sweeping tide.…
The events of Romeo and Juliet are heavily influenced by fate, as oppose to the actions of the characters. To be precise, occurrences in the play are not always as a result of conscience choices that characters make. Rather, chance occurrences (or predestination, depending on one's opinion) cause events to take place; these events seriously alter the course of the play. Fate affects us all every single day, but the sheer number of occurrences related to fate, as well as the powerful affect these events have on the plot creates a specific connection between the play of Romeo and Juliet and fate.…
Some reasons as to why Juliet is reluctant to marry Paris are that she simply doesn't like him and finds him arrogant, and because later on she is secretly married to Romeo. If she went through a wedding ceremony with Paris, the marriage would not be valid, and if she went to bed with Paris, she would be cheating on Romeo, the husband she loves. When the Nurse is talking…
Romeo and Juliet, written by Shakespeare, is a romantic tragedy that involves two teenagers who fall in love at a ball and later, they find out that they are from feuding families. Nonetheless, they still manage to continue their love affair in secret and ultimately, things end up spiraling out of control which results in their death. Romeo and Juliet are to blame for their own deaths. It’s their fault and not the families for the feud—or other misunderstandings that might have been interpreted wrong—because it was their own decision to take their own lives, thus makes them responsible for their own death—not anyone else’s.…
Sometimes fate is like a small sandstorm that keeps changing direction. You can change direction too but the storm will continue to chase you. So you just have to step into the storm, and walk through us step by step. Fate. Who would guess that this measly, one-syllable, four lettered word would play such a big role in William Shakespeare’s “Romeo and Juliet.” Sometimes fate is like a small sandstorm that keeps changing direction. You can change direction too but the storm will continue to chase you. So you just have to step into the storm, and walk through us step by step. In Shakespeare’s play, “Romeo and Juliet” fate is one of the main contributors that lead to their deaths. Fate can be identified throughout the play when Romeo gets the invitation to the Capulet feast, Frair Laurence’s letter not getting delivered to Romeo and Juliet waking up too late.…
There are various techniques used in both the Romeo and Juliet films. Both Baz Luhrmann and Franco Zeffirelli use there skills and knowledge to recreate Shakespeare's version of Romeo and Juliet. Both films use different styles, settings, character choice and colour. I will give you my opinion on how both film makers use different techniques and styles through out each film. ACT 3 SCENE 1, "THE FIGHT SCENE" in particular.…
The following topics from Romeo and Juliet must be included, but you may use any type of newspaper article to demonstrate your knowledge of these topics. Since 10 are required, after these 8 are included you may write the remaining articles on a topic of your choice (relating to the play, of course).…