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Fate

Some people may not believe that fate is something that truthfully exists in the world. Knowing that it isn’t necessary to turn out just one certain way. They trust that whatever accurs in their lives comes as a result of the decisions that they make with there own free will. Others, however, believe that whatever happens during the course of their is inevitable.

ROMEO AND JULIET has fate as an exceptionally crucial force. Pulling the characters into a more animated state. Because of fate. The play become tremendously thrilling and it is exactly what manage the two Young lovers to meet each other in the first place.

in fact, it is infused through the play, to the point that the characters are even aware of it, seeing omens in many situations. Fate works in all aspects of the lovers relationship from start with ROMEO falling instantly in love with JULIET at a party he never should have attended in an attempt to see another girl. Juliet is the daughter of the enemy of his family, yet love bloom instantly in spite of the feud, here is an excellent example of fate intervening in the relationship. ROMEO pursues JULIET quickly and relentlessll, driven by love (or lust whichever is more likely in a teenage boy of his age ) to propose merriage, and friar Laurence’s reluctant agreement to perform the ceremony, once again demonstrate fate. Perhaps the saddest, yet best example of fate in the drama accurs at the end when ROMEO misses Balthasar, who carries news of friar Laurences plan and JULIET’S feigned death, only to arrive and kill himself in a cruel twist of fate because he is now dead. The whole play is one huge example of how cruel fate can be and how events, small and large, work together to make it break any given event, even a potentially great love, such as that of ROMEO and JULIET. Maybe it all happened to teach the feuding families a lesson

ROMEO and JULIET EASaY

Language “he that hath…”

(fate).    events

-Tripping on graves

-Chance meeting of

Seviant with guest list

-Friar Johns quarantine

Prologue:

pre determines ROMEO JULIET

fate

The Path

1) scour through your own notes for other references to fate

2) for every point you’re going to make, find a full accurate quotation

3) develop an out line of your eassay- paragraph by paragraph

Fate in Romeo and Juliet

Fate is where pre-determined events lead to a final destinations. Shakespeare creates tension through constant references to fate in ROMEO and JULIET. An example of this is Shakespeare use of language. In his metaphor “let he that hath steerage of my course, direct my sail” which ROMEO says before the Capulet party in ACT 1, Scene 4, Shakespeare describes ROMEO as a ship, captained by God

FATE

ROMEO encounters capulets servant with the guest list.

balthasar seeing juliets funeral.

FRIAR  LAWRENCES latter doesn’t make it to ROMEO because of quarantine.

in the language “He that faith steerage”

FRIAR LAWRENCES tripping on graves

Act 1 scence1

KADEECE, ANDY, I swear, we can’t let them make us feel like a wast man in public, We won’t take that from them

ANDY

(teasing kADEECE) No, because then we’d be a wast man

 

KADEECE

What I mean is, if they make us angry we’ll pull out our knifes and guns and shot them to death

ANDY

Maybe sometimes you should focus on pulling yourself out of trouble, KADECE

KADECE
I go hard on people when I’m angry you get me

ANDY

How? It hard to get you angry tho

KADEECE

One of those RARS from the Mhouse can easily make me angry.

ANDY
Angry enough to run away. You won’t stand and fight.