Romeo and Juliet
William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet is considered the epitome of romantic text. When someone talks about doomed love or true love, they always go back to Romeo and his paramour. So much is made of the love story between the two, that the tragedy of the events has come to be misinterpreted as adding to the romance. With this misunderstanding has become this notion that Romeo and Juliet are interchangeable characters, their gender and their name being the only thing that divides the two as individuals. This is entirely untrue. When you do a close reading of the play and at the actual words Shakespeare uses, it becomes evident that Romeo and Juliet are indeed very different people. Romeo is controlled by his impulses, whether they are to fight or to love or to die. Juliet, on the other hand is more methodical and though she ultimately makes her decisions based on the will of her heart, she at least takes the time to reflect on their consequences.
When the audience first meets Romeo Montague, he is beside himself with love for a woman named Rosalind. His first scene, he is lamenting piteously that the woman he loves does not love him and so he feels unlike himself. "Tut, I have lost myself; I am not here; / This is not Romeo, he's some other where" (I.i.190-191). It is as though without a woman to love, Romeo has no identity. Romeo only agrees to go to the party held by the Capulets in order that he might see his Rosalind again. At this point, Rosalind is the only woman he could ever imagine loving....
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