Literary devices have many roles in works of literature. Writers use literary devices to evoke a desired response from the reader in their works of literature. There are many different literary devices with different purposes. For instance, imagery is one specific literary device that authors use in their work. William Shakespeare is one author who uses imagery to express the tone and mood in his works. In the tragedy Romeo and Juliet, William Shakespeare uses the imagery of poison and dreams to express the tone of tragedy and death. Shakespeare uses the imagery of poison to express a tone of tragedy. For example, Friar Lawrence speaks of a plant with a powerful poison that possesses the ability to heal and to kill. If it is inhaled and …show more content…
Although, if the consumer 's life is dominated with an evil influence that person will die no matter how they use it. This relates to Romeo and Juliet’s love, which symbolizes the good, while the feud between their families symbolizes the dominating evil. This expresses a tone of tragedy because it foreshadows the sorrow of Romeo and Juliet’s untimely and unnecessary deaths due to the feud. Another example is when Juliet is about to drink the sleeping potion administered to her by the Friar. This potion will feign her death for forty two hours by putting her in a cold, death like, deep sleep. Juliet has a fearful thought that in fact the sleeping potion is a pernicious poison and the Friar is trying to kill her. However, she assuages these fears by reminding herself he is a holy man who would not commit such cunning actions. This foreshadows the lamentable death of Juliet, relating to the tone of tragedy. “What if it be a poison which the Friar subtly hath minist’red to have me dead… methinks it should not for he heath still be tried a holy man.” (Shakespeare iv. iii. 24-29). Lastly, when Romeo heard the news of Juliet’s death he visits an apothecary in Mantua, the place he has been banished to. He was searching for a
Friar put forth the plan to fake Juliet’s death, which made Romeo kill himself and Juliet kill herself. When the plan was in action Friar was thinking of a way that Romeo and Juliet can see each other. So, Friar came up with Juliet drinking a potion that could bring many dangers. The poison makes anyone who drinks it seems as if they are dead.
After carrying out Friar Laurence's plan, Juliet is asleep in the tomb with the potion slowly fading away. Romeo goes to the tomb to see Juliet one last time before he commits suicide and kills what would be Juliet’s arranged husband on the way. After seeing Juliet dead, he drinks poison killing himself and soon after Juliet astonishingly wakes up only to see Romeo’s dead body. At this moment Friar enters the tomb and sees Juliet, panicking for his wrong actions, he says, “Stay not to question, for the watch is coming/Come, go, good Juliet, I dare no longer stay” (5.3.158-159).
Romeo, an overly dramatic character, is one who does not think things through. Romeo’s death was caused due to Friar Laurence, who failed to send a letter informing Romeo that Juliet was simply in a death like sleep. Romeo, being one to jump to solutions stated, ‘Noting this penury, to myself I said, “ An if a man did need a poison now”… (Shakespeare 5:1 Lines 51-52)’.
Literary devices can be seen everywhere. From writing, music, advertisements, and so on. When writing and telling stories, we usually use literary devices to help strengthen the words you write to add more of an impact on the reader while reading. Using literary devices such as. metaphors and similes create comparisons between two different things.
Juliet drinks the sleeping potion despite her fears because she would rather everyone believe her death in place of marrying Paris. She worries the Friar only gave it to her in order to not be disgraced. “What if it be a poison which the friar Subtly hath ministered to have me dead… Lest… He should be dishonored”(Shakespeare 258). Then she worries about waking up with her dead relatives all around her.
In Act 4 scene 3, Juliet takes drastic measures so that she could see Romeo again. In this scene, Juliet 's father is forcing her to marry Paris, but her heart belongs to someone else, Romeo. For this reason, she develops a plan where she takes a temporary poison which makes her look as if she is dead, when in reality she is not. After contemplating the plausible outcomes, Juliet takes this poison so that she can wake up after 42 hours, hoping that Romeo would be by her side, and that they could live happily ever after. The drinking of this poison shows that Juliet embodies many characteristics, one of includes being courageous.
Literary devices are used by an author to enhance a story. These devices can help to make a piece more descriptive, complex and thrilling. Literary devices can also help the reader further understand the text. Conflict, characterization, and imagery are exemplary examples of literary devices used by authors. Conflict is one of the most essential literary devices.
Now that Juliet is (unwillingly) being wed to Paris, the Friar sees a solution in a vial of poison that will make Juliet seem as though she’s dead. His warning speech goes: “Take thou this vial, being then in bed / And this distilled liquor drink thou off / When presently through all thy veins shall run / A cold and drowsy humor, for no pulse / Shall keep his native progress, but surcease” (Act 4, Scene 1). Essentially, the Friar is warning Juliet of what how the poison will affect her. He instructs her to lay in bed as if asleep, and drink the liquid.
Foreshadowing is used to stubbly warn the audience of the approaching tragedy. Friar Lawrence alludes to the deaths of Romeo and Juliet that will result from their rushed marriage when he tells Romeo in ACT 2, scene 6, line 9, “These violent delights have violent ends.” With violent delights referring to their fiery passion and violent ends to their deaths. Another feature used is simile, in ACT 1, scene 4, line 26 Romeo uses a simile when talking to Mercutio, “Is love a tender thing? It is too rough, too rude, too boisterous, and it pricks like thorn.”
The theme of love is often associated with peace and kindness. However, in Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, the two lovers’ suicidal impulse shows love as a cause of self-destructive violence, as seen through their thoughts, words and actions. Firstly, Romeo and Juliet’s suicidal thoughts reveal the violence caused by their love. In other words, it is their intense passion for each other that leads to their contemplation of suicide. For instance, when Romeo is told of Juliet’s supposed death, he immediately thinks of killing himself and begins to plan his suicide, as demonstrated by the following quote: “Well, Juliet, I will lie with thee tonight.
Literary devices that are used correctly bring clarity, and richness to the author's literature and help the reader understand the message the author is trying to send more explicit. Using Literary devices makes the reader understand the message more clearly by putting them into greater depth with the meaning. Literary devices help improve not only the author's writing but the reader's knowledge as well. The devices authors use such as metaphors, personifications, alliteration, similes and
In William Shakespeare’s play, The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet, two lovers are bound to death by fate, and the audience is informed of this fact by the large amount of foreshadowing seen throughout the play. In each scene, at least one example of foreshadowing can be seen. This literary device is used to help form the tone of the story and give readers a feeling for what is going to happen next. For example, before the Capulet party, Romeo says that he had a dream, in which he had died, and that his death in the dream was linked to his attending the Capulet party.
Heartbroken, he found Juliet’s body, still affected by the potion on her tomb. He drank a poisonous potion so he could die beside her. When Juliet did eventually awake, she was greeted with the sight of her dead lover and stabbed herself
Seeking to flee her father’s demands about marrying Paris, Juliet ran to Friar Lawrence in pursuit of a plan, or else threatening to take her own life. Once Friar Lawrence finally gave in to Juliet’s pleas, he comforted her by saying, “Let not the Nurse lie with thee in thy chamber. / Take thou this vial, being then in bed, / And this distilling liquor drink thou off” (4.1.92-94). This proposition made the entire Capulet family believe that Juliet was dead, but unfortunately it was not passed on to Romeo in the right means, which made him believe that Juliet was truly dead.
Romeo, receiving an insufficient amount of and therefore wrong details about Juliet’s so-called death, killed himself, finding no reason to continue living in his unhappy state, and he exhibited this mindset with the following quotation: “How oft when men are at the point of death? Have they been merry,