Topic > Dilemmas in Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare

Romeo's DilemmasWhen people look carefully at the story of Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare, they will notice that it is a tragedy with tons of moral features. Shakespeare's writing is still very popular today and is still used for its good relationship with today's world and things that happen in our daily lives. In Romeo and Juliet, Shakespeare accurately depicts the dilemmas of Romeo who faces a specific dilemma of immaturity with three different ideas that he has to deal with such as their families fighting, that he cannot be with Juliet and his immaturity leading to suicide. a dilemma in the play is the two families fighting. How ethical is it to extremely dislike someone for the sake of having a certain household name? All this is part of a generation in which human beings turned their attention to religions, which teaches us not to hate them. The reason I question this is because I think it's unexpected that both Romeo and Juliet seem somewhat religious, considering that the number one person Romeo turned to for help was Friar Laurence, along with a couple of scenes in Romeo and Juliet who show up in/or throughout the church. I personally think this antagonism is quite bad when it comes to Capulets and Montagues because I was constantly under the feeling that the families had been fighting and arguing for a long time and that no one really knew why they hated each other anymore. In the middle of the play there is a great conflict between the two families when Romeo fights Tybalt. Romeo says, “This fight will decide who will die.” (Act III, scene 1, line 93). Here the reader will notice that Romeo is about to fight Tybalt and... middle of paper......t Verona which basically means why Juliet is there. When Juliet wakes up and sees Romeo's dead body right next to her, she kills herself too. This suicide is what truly demonstrates the immaturity of Romeo and Juliet's passionate love. The certainty that Romeo and Juliet committed suicide is neither tragic nor mature. To conclude, Romeo was a very immature person throughout the play and I think she married too soon and too quickly. They were both so immature and insecure that they committed suicide instead of running away. In Romeo and Juliet, Romeo had to deal with an immaturity dilemma with three different ideas that he was faced with, such as conflicting families, the fact that he couldn't be with Juliet, and his obvious immaturity that led him to commit suicide. All in all, Romeo and Juliet were too young to get married, so they had to deal with the consequences.