William Shakespeare was a very famous poet in the 16th and 17th centuries. To this day, his work is known and loved by many people . Some of his most famous works include Hamlet, King Lear, Macbeth, and most importantly, Romeo and Juliet. Romeo and Juliet is a story of 2 star-crossed lovers from feuding families. William Shakespeare, in Romeo and Juliet, uses foreshadowing, dramatic irony, and tragedy to achieve the idea of fate vs free will. The characters premeditate their tragedy at the end of the play by saying certain lines throughout the play. William Shakespeare uses foreshadowing to achieve the idea of fate in the play Romeo and Juliet. In Act 3, scene 5, sentence 17, Romeo is talking to Juliet and he says “Let me be ta'en, let me be put to death;” This is foreshadowing because Romeo is talking about being put to death, and in the next couple weeks of the play, he does get put to his end. This adds to the idea of fate because, even before he dies, Romeo predicts his demise and the audience already knows of his death so this gives them some …show more content…
“If he be marrièd, My grave is like to be my wedding bed.” (1.5.133b,134). As Juliet says this, she has no idea that Romeo will lead to her untimely demise but the audience does. This shows dramatic irony and also shows that fate led to their passing away. “Shall give him such an unaccustomed dram,That he shall soon keep Tybalt company;“. Lady Capulet is telling her daughter that after Romeo is exiled, she is going to send over a potion to him that will immediately kill him. At the end of the play, Romeo drinks a poison that he got from the apothecary which will kill him after he thought Juliet had died. The dramatic irony is very visible to the audience because we know what happens in the end but to Lady Capulet and Juliet, they have no idea so that shows that Romeo was fated to his death with
Foreshadowing of Romeo and Juliet’s Death In the play Romeo and Juliet, by Shakespeare, foreshadowing is a recurring literary device throughout the whole play. The foreshadowing predicts the tragic deaths of Romeo and Juliet. For instance, the prologue foreshadows the whole play, but specifically the deaths of Romeo and Juliet. When setting up the scene by explaining the two feuding families, Shakespeare introduces the two lovers, “From forth the fatal loins of these two foes / A pair of star-crossed lovers take their life;”(prologue Act 1 5-6) From the prologue, Shakespeare indicates the unfortunate fates of the lovers who come from the bickering families.
In Romeo and Juliet the quote in act 5 scene 3 "i'll be brief O happy dagger this thy sheaf there rust and let me die" shows how Juliet is attempting to kill her self. Juliet controlled what she did in that moment, not fate. Juliet does what she wants not anything else. Lastly the quote in act 1 scene 1 "some consequence yet hanging in the stars shall bitterly begin his fearful date with this nights revels and expire the term" demonstrates that there's not any fate. He predicts he's going to die because of their love.
Death, tragedy, and fate are just some of the themes in the play “Romeo and Juliet”, by William Shakespear, but were the tragic deaths of Romeo and Juliet really fate? No, Romeo and Juliet deaths were not caused by fate. Their deaths were caused by their own free-will, shown by Romeo’s rash decision making, Friar Lawrence's poor planning, and Juliets bad decisions. Romeo’s rash decision making is a reason for his and Juliet's deaths. This is shown after Tybalt kills Mercutio and, “Romeo kills Tybalt for revenge (3.1.88-142).”
Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare is a play depicting the tragedy of two star-crossed lovers devotion to each other. Their families feud kept the two from being together. The two’s immense loyalty to each other resulted in their deaths. A major theme in this book is “love conquers all” and this leads to an important argument; was the story’s devastating ending fate or free will? Romeo and Juliet’s actions lead to their demise and the story was most definitely driven by free will.
In his tragic play Romeo and Juliet, William Shakespeare suggests Romeo’s submission to fate results in his agony and ultimate demise, implying that ignoring one’s free will can have profound consequences. When Juliet inquires how Romeo found her balcony, he replies, “By love, that first did prompt me to inquire. … I am no pilot; yet, wert thou as far /As that vast shore washed with the farthest sea, I should adventure for such merchandise.” (2.2.85)
In the beginning of the play, Shakespeare starts with, “a pair of star-crossed lovers take their life” (1.Prologue). In the Elizabethan era, people believed that one’s destiny was already planned out based on the stars. With this introduction, Shakespeare has already let the audience know that Romeo and Juliet will die. This obviously means that the two paramours will die, but it also means that fate is to blame for their demise. Therefore, the audience knows that Romeo and Juliet will commit suicide, and it first starts when Romeo finds Juliet “dead” and states, “
Beatty 1 Will Beatty Mrs. Laxton ENG 9 Honors 6 March 2018 Romeo and Juliet: Fate vs. Free Will Fate is already determined, where free will is when you decide your life decisions. In William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet this topic is debated. The play Romeo and Juliet is a compelling story of two kids who let nothing get in the way of their love. The main characters in the play are Romeo and Juliet.
Next Juliet foreshadows her own death and her wedding bed does indeed become her grave. In addition, this shows that Juliet determined her own fate by predicting her future and making her thoughts come true, based on the decisions she made leading up to this moment. Then, Romeo determines his own fate by making his own decisions. Finally, before Romeo attended the party, where he so easily fell with Juliet, he had some doubts about what the future withheld as he feared, “…for my mind misgives some consequence yet hanging in the stars shall bitterly begin his fearful date…and expired the term of a despised life closed in my breast by some vile forfeit of untimely death” (Shakespeare 391). Lastly, Romeo determined his own fate because Romeo had a feeling, which he feared, that something destined was going to happen.
Destiny vs Free Will has been a debate of which takes more control in stories and in real life. I believe that free will/personal choices take more control in the lives of people. This can be proven by the stories The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet and Pyramus and Thisbe. The choices that these characters made in the stories greatly affected how the story progressed and how their lives ended in tragedy.
Have you ever fallen in love? Well, Love is something that makes people go crazy. The way they go crazy could be worse ways and good ways too. Also, People who are in love tend to make very quick decisions and not really think or wait/patiences about it. Also, Can you imagine taking a potion to avoid something from your life?
I believe that there is some fate in life because somethings your decisions can't save you. An example of this would be when you die. Unless you choose to die yourself then you won't actually choose the day and time you just will because fate decided to kill you off, and eventually everyone will die in their lives so its impossible to avoid death at this time. Otherwise in almost every other situation you make decisions to get there. One example of this is if you choose to go to a party and at the party you meet your true love (Reference to Romeo and Juliet) you would have made the decision to go to the party and they would have made the same decision.
Throughout the play, Juliet and Romeo mention their presumed deaths. An example of this is when Romeo mentions his untimely demise before he enters the Capulet household for their feast. Romeo says: “I fear too early, for my mind misgives Some consequence yet hanging in the stars” (1.4.104-105). Even before he meets Juliet and confronts the Friar, Romeo is being hinted at by fate that he will die shortly and sadly. Juliet hints at her demise again, this time after she is disciplined by her father.
Do you think that sometimes we meet people for a reason , or do they just happen to be at the right place at the right time. The world may never know. At the end of the day I think that everything happens for a reason. Romeo had the free will to kill himself, but didn’t have the choice of him missing the mail or drinking the poison right before Juliet woke up. Everything happened the way it did for a reason that is why they died the way they did.
Romeo 's personality of peace, loving, yet vengeful caused his own doom once he was exiled for killing Tybalt who killed Mercutio. Thus 'evidently causing pain for Juliet who lost both her lover and cousin. Juliet 's father arranging Juliet 's marriage to Paris made her mourning worse, already being married to Romeo yet being separated made her to reason with Friar Laurence. The plan that was supposed to reunite both Lovers indefinetly brought upon their own doom. Juliet herself drank the sleeping potion when Romeo was on his way earlier than anticipated, whom bought poison upon hearing of her "death" , planning to kill himslef on her tomb alongside her.
The theme of Fate vs. Free Will is dominant in William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet; however the theme of fate is more significant than free will. In the play both Romeo and Juliet meeting was contributed by fate as Shakespeare mentioned in the prologue that Romeo and Juliet were star-crossed lovers that were meant to meet, fall in love and their death would be the reason for the feud to end between the two families. Fate was the reason Capulet’s servant asked Romeo and Benvolio to help him read the invitation for him that contained all the names of the people that were invited to the ball Capulet hosted. “…If you be not of the house of Montagues, I pray come and crush a cup of wine.