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Causes And Consequences In Shakespeare's Romeo And Juliet

Decent Essays

Have you ever felt a tremendously passionate crush on someone to the point where you’re confident you’re in love… only to fast forward a year you’re wondering to yourself what attractive qualities you saw in that person? “Eros” is an ancient Greek word for love at first sight, or love by looks. The famous play Romeo and Juliet goes forward in time by revealing the dangerous issue of Eros that even modern-day teenagers face. Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet is a tragic story about a young man and woman who fall in love by appearance and eventually commit suicide over each other’s death. The danger of Eros can best be seen in the play through Romeo by his thoughts and actions. In the beginning of the play, the audience can discover unstable love right off the bat when Romeo quickly changes his mind about who he loves in one day. In this quote, Romeo is saying that Rosaline is the only girl he will ever love. “One fairer than my love? The all-seeing sun ne’er saw her match since the world begun” (1.2.95-96). Romeo says he’s in love with Rosaline and that he could never love a woman as he loves Rosaline, but what happens later that day proves otherwise. That same day, Romeo is telling himself about how lovely Juliet is and how he loves her. “But soft! What light through yonder window breaks? It is the East, for Juliet is the sun! …It is my lady! It is my love!” (2.2.2-3, 10). Now Romeo is in love with Juliet, and no woman could ever be more astounding or gorgeous than Juliet.

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